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. . thus with this book our revels end."
being the Class Book of the Seniors of
1936 and published by them as a suitable
souvenir of their days at Hahnemann
Philadelphia, June the Eleventh, Nineteen-Thirty-six
WILLIAM M. SYLVIS, M.D., F.A.C.S.
IN APPRECIATION
We, the Senior Class, acknowledge our debt and are
grateful for this opportunity to dedicate the 1936
Medic to
WILLIAM M. SYLVIS, M.D., F.A.C.S.
From Doctor Sylvis:
You who will practice general medicine are accepting a tremendous re-
sponsibility and will hold a very significant place in the lives of your patients.
The average run of ailments will find you perfectly competent, but, on the other
hand, situations will arise whose adeguate treatment will reguire the services of
one more expert in the given field.
Though you may be more or less isolated, determine to keep abreast with
the constant advances in the sciences that you may safeguard the health and
well-being of those of the community in which you practice. Your knowledge of
the environment, the past and present history of the patient, will be invaluable to
the clinical consultant and he in turn will render better service to you and
your patient.
Next in importance to the acguisition of a due store of medical knowledge
and skill is the cultivation of a professional spirit. This is the very soul of your
occupation, without which it would be a lifeless instrument for the supply of
your necessities. He who considers his profession as an avenue to nothing higher
than pecuniary gains will find his capacity, and conscience also, dwindling to the
measure of his views. There is no principle so influential in promoting every
liberal and useful effort, in restraining every irregular and sordid act, in giving
a high tone to sentiment and conduct, as a true professional spirit which looks
beyond personal profit to the respectability, honor, dignity and general usefulness
of a calling.
God's speed as you go your way, ever mindful of your Alma Mater that
she too in the distant years may be proud of her sons who leave in the Class of
Nineteen-Thirty-six.
Yesterday is a Memory
Tomorrow is a Mystery
TO-DAY is the day
HERBERT L. NORTHROP. M.A.. M.D., F.A.C.S., 1866-1936
Only a few short weeks ago he was operating in his clinic . . .
a clinic that because of his skill had achieved wide recognition.
Only a few short weeks ago he was delivering his lectures . . .
lectures that were classics, scholarly in presentation,
modern in content, replete with the wisdom and philosophy
of the physician-surgeon.
Now they tell us he is dead.
But we, his students, know this cannot be.
The quiet charm of his manner . . .
His genuine kindliness . . .
His absolute honesty . . .
His courage and tenacity . . .
These qualities are alive and remain with us.
For his skill and the service he rendered we admire him . . .
For every gracious quality and every noble virtue we love him . . .
His inspiration shall be our heritage.
IN MEMORIAM
CLARENCE BARTLETT, M.D., 1858-1935
GEORGE HENRY BICKLEY, M.A., M.D., 1873-1936
OLIVER SLOAN HAINES, M.D., 1860-1936
JOHN LEWIS VANTINE, JR., M.D., 1867-1936
GUSTAVE A. VAN LENNEP, M.D., '94
Both the department of surgery and Dr. Van Lennep are to be congratu-
lated on the new professorship. The staff for its excellent choice and the surgeon
for the opportunity presented him to carry on the splendid work of the late
Herbert L. Northrop.
No other seems so well qualified for the honor and responsibility — by reason
of his education and wide clinical experience, combined with thirty-nine years'
service to the Hahnemann Hospital and College.
We Seniors, with an all too brief association, extend our hand in felicitation.
CLASS MESSAGE
Soon we shall be receiving our degrees as doctors of medicine, a goal of
many years and the achievement of which certainly calls for the ancestral
champagne.
At such a time it is easy to be so enthused with one's own importance that
those who have helped along the way are quite forgotten.
Individually, we want to thank our families for the things they have done
without, that we might become physicians, and hope that our gratitude will be
expressed more concretely in the not too distant future.
Collectively, we want to thank the faculty and staff for their contribution.
Time taken from busy lives, and effort spent to help pass along to us the knowl-
edge of things medical — the grand tradition of the profession.
ADMINISTRATION
TRUSTEES
Honorary President Honorary Vice-President
CHARLES D. BARNEY, M.A. ISAAC W. JEANES
President
JOHN GRIBBEL, M.A., LL.D.
Vice-Presidents
JOSEPH S. CONWELL, LL.B.
LOT BOARDMAN
Secretary
PHILIP C. SNOW
Solicitor
ALFRED EDGAR FREEMAN, A.B., LL.B.
Board of Trustees
LOT BOARDMAN JOHN GRIBBEL, M.A., LL.D.
GIDEON BOERICKE, M.S., C.E. THOMAS G. HAWKES, A.M., LL.B.
J. WARNER BUTTERWORTH LOUIS J. KOLB, B.S., Sc.D., LL.D.
WILLIAM CLAYTON PHILIP C. SNOW
JOSEPH S. CONWELL, LL.B. FREDERIC H. STRAWBRIDGE, JR.
ALFRED E. FREEMAN, A.B., LL.B. FREDERIC J. von RAPP
GRANVILLE WORRELL, 2ND
JOHN GRIBBEL, M.A., LL.D.
FREDERIC J. von RAPP
Piovost of the College
TO THE CLASS OF 1936
As you enter this great service, the practice of medicine, may we remind
you of the excellent medical education you have received at Hahnemann. This
training, coupled with the desire to make your life a mission of mercy, will inspire
confidence in all those you serve.
Four years at Hahnemann must have impressed you with the success at-
tained in medicine and surgery by such men as Doctors Benson, Boericke,
Eberhard, Frank, Nagle, Palen, Raue, Weaver, Wells, Ashcraft, Brooke, Craig,
James, Northrop, Van Lennep, Steinhilber and many others whose loyalty to
your Alma Mater and interest in your education should be a great incentive to
you in the attainment of your career.
May we, in turn, have your support in building up our future classes with
the highest type of professional men. And further, as members of the Alumni,
your active interest in the growth of Hahnemann.
DR. WILLIAM A. PEARSON
Dean ol the College
HAHNEMANN HOSPITAL
PROPOSED HAHNEMANN MEDICAL COLLEGE
FACU LTY
THOMAS W. PHILLIPS, M.D.
M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1916
University of Pennsylvania, 1923
St. Mark's, London, 1925
Post-Graduate Surgery
Post-Graduate Proctology
Professor and Head of the
Department of Anatomy
A N ATOMY
WILLIAM M. SYLVIS, M.D., Professor of Anatomy
THOMAS M. SNYDER, M.D., Professor of Histology and Embryology
CARROLL R. McCLURE, M.D., Associate in Histology and Embryology
C. L. SHOLLENBERGER, M.D., Lecturer in Anatomy
LOWELL L. LANE, M.D., Instructor in Histology and Embryology
WILLIAM J. KUEMMEL, M.D., Assistant in Anatomy
ROWLAND RICKETTS, M.D., Assistant in Anatomy
RUSSELL K. MATTERN, M.D., Assistant in Anatomy
WILLIAM Y. LEE, M.D., Assistant in Anatomy
HARRY P. LANDIS, JR., M.D., Assistant in Histology and Embryology
WILLIAM A.
Ph.D., M.D.
PEARSON, Ph.C,
Ph.C, University of Michigan, 1900
Ph.D., University of Michigan, 1902
Sc.D., La Salle College, 1926
M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1915
Professor and Head of the Department of
Chemistry, 1906
Dean, Hahnemann Medical College, 1913
CHEMISTRY
JOSEPH S. HEPBURN, A.B., A.M., B.S. in Chem., M.S., Ph.D., M.D.,
Associate Professor of Chemistry
JOSEPH CHANDLER, A.B., Ph.D., Associate Professor of Chemistry
NATHAN GRIFFITH, LL.B., Lecturer on Medical Jurisprudence
WILLIAM G. SCHMIDT, A.B., B.S. in Ch.E., Ph.G., Ph.C, A.M., LL.B., LL.M.
M.P.L., Ph.D., Lecturer on Bio-physics and Physical Chemistry
EDWIN HICKS, B.S., Instructor in Chemistry
HIRAM FRANCIS SNIDER, B.S., M.S., Instructor in Chemistry
FRANK H. WIDMAN, M.D.
University of Pennsylvania
M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1893
Assistant in Biology, 1899-1900
Lecturer on Embryology, 1900-1909
Professor of Embryology, 1909-1912
Demonstrator of Physiology, 1902-1909
Lecturer on Physiology, 1910-1911
Associate Professor of Physiology, 1912-1913
Professor and Head of the Department of
Physiology, 1913
Registrar, Hahnemann Medical College
PHYSIOLOGY
JOSEPH S. HEPBURN, A.B., A.M., B.S. in Chem., M.S., Ph.D., M.D.
Associate Professor of Chemistry
JOHN C. SCOTT, A.B., Ph.D., Associate Professor of Physiology
GEORGE D. GECKELER, M.D., Lecturer on Physiology
THOMAS J. VISCHER, M.D., Instructor in Physiology
H. FRANKLIN FLANAGAN, M.D., Instructor in Physiology
FRANCIS M. JAMES, M.D., Instructor in Physiology
THEODORE W. BATTAFARANO, M.D., Assistant in Physiology
SAMUEL W. SAPPINGTON, M.D.,
F.A.C.P.
M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1897
Professor and Head of the Department of
Pathology and Bacteriology
Pathologist to Hahnemann Hospital
Physician to Hahnemann Hospital
PATH O LOGY
O. F. BARTHMAIER, M.D., Associate Professor of Pathology
GRANT O. FAVORITE, M.D., Associate Professor of Pathology
FRANK O. NAGLE, M.D., Associate in Ophthalmological Pathology
WILLIAM M. SYLVIS, M.D., Associate in Surgical Pathology
H. RUSSELL FISHER, M.D., Associate in Pathology
DAVID W. HORN, Ph.D., Lecturer on Hygiene
FRED C. PETERS, M.D., Instructor in Ophthalmological Pathology
T. M. SNYDER, M.D., Instructor in Ophthalmological Pathology
HUNTER S. COOK, M.D., Instructor in Pathology
HENRY D. LAFFERTY, M.D., Instructor in Gynecological Pathology
EVERETT H. DICKINSON, M.D., Instructor in Surgical Pathology
PAUL C. MOOCK, M.D., Assistant in Gynecological Pathology
HARLAN WELLS, M.D.
n Med., F.A.C.P.
D.S<
B.S., University of Delaware, 1898
M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1902
ScD., University of Delaware, 1934
Professor and Head of the Department of
Medicine
Physician-in-Chief to Hahnemann Hospital
Physician-in-Chief to Abington Hospital
Consulting Physician to the Woman's
Homeopathic Hospital, the West Jersey
Homeopathic Hospital, the Crozer Hospital
MEDICINE
RALPH BERNSTEIN, M.D., Professor of Dermatology
W. R. WILLIAMS, M.D., Professor of Clinical Medicine
JOSEPH McELDOWNEY, M.D., Clinical Professor of Medicine
DONALD R. FERGUSON, M.D., Clinical Professor of Medicine
E. ROLAND SNADER, JR., M.D., Clinical Professor of Medicine
PAUL C. WITTMAN, M.D., Clinical Professor of Dermatology
GEORGE D. GECKELER, M.D., Associate Professor of Medicine
CHARLES J. WHITE, M.D., Associate Professor of Physical Diagnosis
J. ANTRIM CRELLIN, M.D., Associate Professor of Medicine
RICHARD W. LARER, M.D., Lecturer on Industrial Medicine
DUNNE W. KIRBY, M.D., Lecturer on Medicine
MORRIS FITERMAN, M.D., Lecturer on Medicine
LOWELL L. LANE, M.D., Lecturer on Medicine
THOMAS J. VISCHER, M.D., Demonstrator of Medicine
HUNTER S. COOK, M.D., Instructor in Medicine
MELVILLE A. GOLDSMITH, M.D., Instructor in Medicine
H. EARL TWINING, M.D., Assistant in Dermatology
WILLIAM KLINMAN, M.D., Assistant in Medicine
WARREN S. HOENSTINE, M.D., Assistant in Medicine
CHARLES E. LAWSON, M.D., Assistant in Medicine
HERBERT M. SHARKIS, M.D., Assistant in Medicine
MICHELE VIGLIONE, M.D., Instructor in Medicine
GERALD A. FINCKE, M.D., Instructor in Medicine
HERMAN KLINE, M.D., Assistant in Dermatology
J. RAWLINS GINTHER, M.D., Assistant in Dermatology
PETER J. WARTER, M.D., Assistant in Medicine
KARL F. MAYER, M.D., Assistant in Medicine
C. SIGMUND RAUE, M.D.
University of Pennsylvania
M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1895
Professor and Head of the Department of
Pediatrics
Physician to Children, Hahnemann Hospital
Consulting Physician to St. Luke's and Children's
Homeopathic Hospital
Consulting Physician to Women's Homeopathic
Hospital
Head of Department of Pediatrics St. Luke's and
Children's Homeopathic Hospital
PEDIATRICS
B. K. FLETCHER, M.D., Clinical Professor of Pediatrics
I. L. REDMAN, M.D., Associate Professor of Pediatrics
J. H. READING, JR., M.D., Associate in Pediatrics
C. D. FOX, M.D., Lecturer on Pediatrics
ALOYSIUS J. BLAKELEY, M.D., Lecturer on Pediatrics
CARL C. FISCHER, M.D., Lecturer on Pediatrics
ROBERT A. HIBBS, M.D., Demonstrator of Pediatrics
HARRY B. MARK, M.D., Instructor in Pediatrics
FREDERICK W. JARVIS, M.D., Instructor in Pediatrics
PAUL M. KISTLER, M.D., Assistant in Pediatrics
HARRY M. EBERHARD, M.A., M.D.
M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1898
Boas Polyclinic — Berlin
Post-Graduate Work — University of Berlin
Professor and Head of the Department of
Gastro-enterology
Gastro-enterologist to Broad Street Hospital
Consulting Gastro-enterologist to Women's
Hospital, Philadelphia
Physician to Hahnemann Hospital
GASTRO-ENTEROLOGY
GEORGE LORENZ, JR., M.D., Associate Professor of Gastro-enterology
WALTER J. SNYDER, M.D., Assistant in Gastro-enterology
JAMES F. TOMPKINS, M.D., Assistant in Gastro-enterology
ROWLAND RICKETTS, M.D., Assistant in Gastro-enterology
LESTER LEROY BOWER, M.D., Assistant in Gastro-enterology
EDWARD A. STEINHILBER, M.D.
M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1909
Professor and Head of the Department of
Neurology and Psychiatry
Associate Professor of History and
Embryology, 1914-1925
Neurologist to Hahnemann Hospital
NEUROLOGY. PSYCHIATRY
HENRY I. KLOPP, M.D., Professor of Mental Diseases
H. F. HOFFMAN, M.D., Associate Professor of Mental Diseases
GEORGE R. NEFF, M.D., Associate in Nervous Diseases
J. HARWOOD CLOSSON, 3RD, M.D., Lecturer on Nervous Diseases
PAUL A. METZGER, M.D., Lecturer on Nervous Diseases
EDGAR M. BLEW, M.D., Instructor in Mental Diseases
L. THOMAS SOOY, M.D., Instructor in Nervous Diseases
JOHN C. SCOTT, A.B., Ph.D., Assistant in Clinical Psychology
GARTH W. BOERICKE, M.D.
University of California
M.D., University of Michigan, 1908
Professor and Head of the Department of Materia
Medica and Therapeutics
Physician to Hahnemann Hospital
Director of Hering Laboratory
MATE R I A MEDICA
JACOB W. FRANK, M.D., Professor of Roentgenology
JOHN A. BORNEMAN, Ph.G., Professor of Pharmacy
FRANK C. BENSON, JR., M.D., Professor of Radiology
WILLIAM B. GRIGGS, M.D., Associate Professor of Therapeutics
J. HARWOOD CLOSSON, 3D, M.D., Associate in Pharmaco-dynamics
CHARLES L. W. RIEGER, M.D., Associate in Roentgenology
N. VOLNEY LUDWICK, M.D., Associate in Radium Therapy
JOHN J. McKENNA, M.D., Associate in Roentgenology
A. E. KRICK, M.D., Associate in Roentgenology
EUGENE F. PAYNE, M.D., Associate in Pharmacology
WILLIAM F. BAKER, M.D., Lecturer on Physiotherapy
JOHN A. BROOKE, M.D., Lecturer on Mechano-therapeutics
JULES J. KLAIN, M.D., Demonstrator of Materia Medica
RUSSELL K. MATTERN, M.D., Demonstrator of Materia Medica
H. M. SYLVESTER, M.D., Instructor in Therapeutics
W. E. KEPLER, M.D., Instructor in Roentgenology
HARRY D. EVANS, M.D., Instructor in Roentgenology
RUSSELL S. MAGEE, M.D., Instructor in Materia Medica
JOHN V. ALLEN, M.D., Instructor in Materia Medica
WILLIAM W. YOUNG, M.D., Assistant in Materia Medica
SIGMUND S. LEWANDOWSKI, M.D., Assistant in Materia Medica
JACOB H. LEHMAN, M.D., Assistant in Roentgenology
RALPH W. DONALDSON, M.D., Assistant in Materia Medica
HARRY P. LANDIS, JR., M.D., Assistant in Materia Medica
GUSTAVE A. VAN LENNEP, M.D.,
F.A.C.S.
M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1894
American College of Surgeons
Professor and Head of Department of Surgery
Surgeon to Hahnemann Hospital
Consulting Surgeon, Allentown State Hospital
Consulting Surgeon, Pottstown Homeopathic
Hospital
Consulting Surgeon, West Jersey Homeopathic
Hospital
SUR6ERY
JOHN A. BROOKE, M.D., Professor of Orthopedic Surgery
WAYNE T. KILLIAN, M.D., Professor of Anesthesia
DESIDERIO ROMAN, M.D., Clinical Professor of Surgery
HERBERT P. LEOPOLD, M.D., Clinical Professor of Surgery
JAMES D. SCHOFIELD, M.D., Clinical Professor of Proctology
JAMES M. GODFREY, M.D., Clinical Professor of Anesthesia
AUBREY B. WEBSTER, M.D., Associate Professor of Surgery
WILLIAM M. SYLVIS, M.D., Associate Professor of Surgery
EVERETT A. TYLER, M.D., Associate Professor of Anesthesia
HENRY S. RUTH, M.D., Associate Professor of Anesthesia
THOMAS L. DOYLE, M.D., Lecturer on Plastic Surgery
CLARENCE L. SHOLLENBERGER, M.D., Lecturer on Surgery
WILLIAM L. MARTIN, M.D., Lecturer on Operative Surgery
EDWIN O. GECKELER, M.D., Lecturer on Surgery
FRANK E. BRISTOL, M.D., Lecturer on Surgery
N. FULMER HOFFMAN, M.D., Instructor in Surgery
GEORGE J. RILLING, M.D., Instructor in Rectal Diseases
EUGENE F. CARPENTER, JR., M.D., Instructor in Surgery
THEODORE C. GEARY, M.D., Instructor in Surgery
EVERETT H. DICKINSON, M.D., Instructor in Surgery
WILLIAM Y. LEE, M.D., Instructor in Surgery
JAMES A. SELIGMAN, M.D., Instructor in Surgery
CHARLES C. THOMPSON, M.D., Instructor in Rectal Diseases
HENRY L. SOMERS, M.D., Instructor in Anesthesia
EDWARD P. VAN TINE, M.D., Instructor in Anesthesia
DONALD T. JONES, M.D., Instructor in Orthopedic Surgery
MAXWELL F. WHITE, M.D., Instructor in Surgery
JOHN F. ROWLAND, M.D., Instructor in Anesthesia
DAVID D. NORTHROP, M.D., Instructor in Surgery
ERNEST L. ROSATO, M.D., Instructor in Rectal Diseases
FRANK H. MURRAY, M.D., Instructor in Surgery
W. A. BUCK, M.D., Instructor in Surgery
R. C. MOYER, M.D., Instructor in Surgery
A. J. O'NEILL, M.D., Instructor in Surgery
M. F. ONDOVCHAK, M.D., Instructor in Surgery
LEON T. ASHCRAFT, A.M., M.D.,
F.A.C.S.
Ph.B., Dickinson College, 1887
A.M., Dickinson College, 1890
M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1890
A.M., Hahnemann Medical College, 1931
Professor and Head of the Department of Urology-
Urologist to Hahnemann Hospital
Urologist to Women's Homeopathic Hospital
Urologist to Broad Street Hospital
Urologist to West Jersey Hospital
UROLOGY
WILLIAM C. HUNSICKER, M.D., Associate Professor of Urology
J. MILLER KENWORTHY, M.D., Associate in Urology
CHARLES F. LEONARD, M.D., Instructor in Urology
BERNARD G. WALKER, M.D., Instructor in Urology
EDWARD W. CAMPBELL, M.D., Instructor in Urology
PASQUALE G. DAMIANI, M.D., Assistant in Urology
LEANDER P. TORI, M.D., Assistant in Urology
HENRY G. BLESSING, M.D., Assistant in Urology
HORACE L. WEINSTOCK, M.D., Assistant in Urology
WILLIAM C. HUNSICKER, JR., M.D., Assistant in Urology
HARRY S. WEAVER, M.A., M.D.,
F.A.C.S.
M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1892
Professor and Head of the Department of
Laryngology, Rhinology, Ophthalmology
and Otology
Laryngologist to Hahnemann Hospital
LARYNGOLOGY . OTOLOGY . RHINOLOGY
GILBERT J. PALEN, M.D., Professor of Otology
FRED W. SMITH, M.D., Clinical Professor of Laryngology and Rhinology
JOSEPH V. F. CLAY, M.D., Clinical Professor of Otology
L. E. MARTER, M.D., Clinical Professor of Laryngology and Rhinology
CHARLES B. HOLLIS, M.D., Clinical Professor of Laryngology and Rhinology
JOSEPH R. CRISWELL, M.D., Associate Professor of Otology
CARROLL F. HAINES, M.D., Associate Professor of Otology
J. CARL CRISWELL, D.D.S., Demonstrator of Dental Surgery
DAVID KAHN, M.D., Demonstrator of Laryngology and Rhinology
JOHN H. McCUTCHEON, M.D., Demonstrator of Laryngology and Rhinology
RAYMOND McGRATH, M.D., Demonstrator of Laryngology and Rhinology
RUSSELL D. GEARY, M.D., Instructor in Laryngology and Rhinology
WILLIAM K. KISTLER, M.D., Instructor in Laryngology and Rhinology
HOWARD S. BUSLER, M.D., Instructor in Laryngology and Rhinology
ARTHUR HIRSHORN, M.D., Assistant in Otology
FRANK O. NAGLE, A.M., M.D.
University of Pennsylvania
M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1907
University of Breslau, Vienna
Professor of Ophthalmology
Ophthalmologist to Hahnemann Hospital
Associate in Ophthalmological Pathology
OPHTHALMO LOGY
FREDERICK C. PETERS, M.D., Clinical Professor of Ophthalmology
THOMAS M. SNYDER, M.D., Clinical Professor of Ophthalmology
CHARLES J. V. FRIES, M.D., Associate Professor of Ophthalmology
MARION W. BENJAMIN, M.D., Associate in Ophthalmology
WILLIAM JNO. RYAN, M.D., Associate in Ophthalmology
H. FRANKLIN FLANAGAN, M.D., Associate in Ophthalmology
HARRY S. WEAVER, JR., M.D., Associate in Ophthalmology
THOMAS F. MALEY, M.D., Associate in Ophthalmology
JOHN EDWIN JAMES, JR.
F.A.C.S.
M.D.
B.S., University of Pennsylvania, 1899
M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1902
Professor and Head of the Department of
Obstetrics
Chief Obstetrician of Hahnemann Hospital
Consulting Obstetrician Crozer Hospital
Consulting Gynecologist of Wilmington
Homeopathic Hospital
OBSTETRICS
WARREN C. MERCER, M.D., Professor of Clinical Obstetrics
LEON CLEMMER, M.D., Clinical Professor of Obstetrics
W. I. TOMLINSON, M.D., Associate Professor of Obstetrics
JAMES B. BERT, M.D., Associate Professor of Obstetrics
NEWLIN F. PAXSON, M.D., Associate Professor of Obstetrics
ALBERT MUTCH, M.D., Lecturer on Obstetrics
DESIDERIO A. ROMAN, M.D., Lecturer on Obstetrics
RICHARD R. GATES, M.D., Lecturer on Obstetrics
ALBERT R. RIHL, JR., M.D., Instructor in Obstetrics
HENRY L. CROWTHER, M.D., Instructor in Obstetrics
HENRY D. LAFFERTY, M.D., Instructor in Obstetrics
WILLIAM G. WOSNACK, M.D., Instructor in Obstetrics
PAUL C. MOOCK, M.D., Instructor in Obstetrics
ELMER F. HERRING, M.D., Assistant in Obstetrics
EARL B. CRAIG, M.D., F.A.C.S.
M.D., Hahnemann Medical College
M.D., Jefferson Medical College, 1908
Professor and Head of the Department of
Gynecology
Gynecologist to Hahnemann Hospital
GYN ECOLOGY
FRANK J. FROSCH, M.D., Associate Professor of Gynecology
ROBERT M. HUNTER, M.D., Demonstrator in Gynecology
CHARLES F. KUTTEROFF, M.D., Demonstrator in Gynecology
EDMOND C. HESSERT, M.D., Instructor in Gynecology
BRUCE V. MacFADYEN, M.D., Instructor in Gynecology
ROBERT F. ROTH, M.D., Instructor in Gynecology
MICHAEL J. BENNETT, M.D., Assistant in Gynecology
ALFRED R. SERAPHIN, M.D., Assistant in Gynecology
SENIORS
OFFICERS
CEDRIC E. DUNN
RAYMOND T. SAXEN
RALPH P. EARLE
JOSEPH A. BALIN
A MESSAGE FROM THE DEAN
Success in the practice of medicine, just as success in any field, is very
difficult of definition. The successful practitioner may be found anywhere, from
Timbuctoo to the most modern medical center, and similarly you may find him at
either extreme of the economic scale, so his comparative affluence is no criterion.
Success may be grossly estimated by the actual assistance given those
in his care. With an humanitarian raison d'etre, everything done should be
evaluated on the basis of the physician's desire to help his fellow man, and only
in pursuit of this can his success be judged.
Completing your formal medical education, an education at Hahnemann
that gives you an especial advantage in general practice, it will be a matter
now of clinical experience and practice before achieving that wisdom so neces-
sary for the successful practice of medicine. This wisdom is a thing of judgment
and imagination, it is a matter of using every attribute and ability possessed to
make yourself valuable to your patient.
By reason of your high purpose in life you automatically become a
leader in your community — an object of respect. Guard this very carefully — it is
your stock in trade — for the work of years can be lost very quickly. Develop and
nourish your position by a wide acquaintanceship and a friendly attitude — get
the most you can out of life, for you enjoy a strategic position for living a life of
immense satisfaction.
A life of satisfaction because of the opportunities to achieve many things —
some of those long, long thoughts of youth, a successful life when adhering to
those ideals — a life of minimal regrets when dedicated to helping the other
fellow.
JOSEPH ALGERNON BALIN
* 5707 N. Park Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa.
f University of Pennsylvania
+ Women's Homeopathic Hospital, Philadelphia
§ Philadelphia, Pa.
* General practice
* Home Address
t College
t Interneship
j Place of Practice
1 Specialty
JOHN EUGENE BARRETT
605 Beaver Street, Bristol, Pa.
St. Joseph's College
Medical Center, Jersey City, N. J.
Pennsylvania
General practice
TAUSBEE BECKHAM BEATTY
Beattyville, Ky.
University of Kentucky
Hahnemann Hospital
Lexington, Ky.
Internal Medicine
GENERAL STATEMENT
The Hahnemann Medical College of Philadelphia is the oldest homeo-
pathic medical school in existence and has stood the test of time. What a time,
what a test and what a standing! In 1928 the old college was razzed, razed and a
new building raised. The old hospital was then left to the dogs and provided very
unsuitable quarters for the college. Both college and hospital now have the ad-
vantage of increased space and equipment (roller towels) and are under one
Board of Trustees, i.e., Herr von Rapp and his stooge, Sergeant Plummer. Like-
wise the Faculty of the Medical School and the Staff of the Hospital are one. The
advantages of such coordination are numerous and odious according to Herr
von Rapp.
Commencement is held on the second Thursday in June, at which time
the successful graduation candidate has conferred upon him the degree of
"Doctor of Medicine" and the special degree of "Doctor of Homeopathic Medi-
cine," this college conferring both degrees by the provision of its charter granted
by the State of Pennsylvania. In the year 1936 there was an effort to confer an
additional degree of "P.G.H." but this movement amounted to naught.
It is the prime object of this school to give a broad and thorough medical
education and to this end it has availed itself of the benefits derived from the
most recent advances in medical teaching and scientific equipment, while not
departing from that conservation which gives stability, nor standardizing its
course to the extinction of initiative.
Barrett. John has a peculiar aversion to blue. Blue books always drove him from
the front row back into the darkest corners. In spite of this phobia
he managed to get excellent grades.
Frye. "Come Bantam rooster, crow not so loudly 'til your spurs are grown."
ROBERT EUGENE BIERWIRTH
West Newton, Pa.
Washington and Jefferson
Pittsburgh Homeopathic Hospital
Pennsylvania
General practice
ELLWOOD VINCENT BOGER
503 W. Girard Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa.
St. Joseph's College
St. Mary's Hospital, Philadelphia
Philadelphia, Pa.
General practice
ROBERT NEWCOM BOWEN
Collingswood, N. J.
University of Pennsylvania
West Jersey Homeopathic Hospital, Camden, N. J.
South Jorsey
Obstetrics
Special attention is directed to the Department of Materia Medica and
Therapeutics. The "materiar medicar" of Hahnemann, Hering, Boericke,
and Young is thoroughly elucidated throughout the course by a group of
monotonous readers.
REGULATIONS
REQUIREMENTS FOR ADMISSION
For admission the maximum requirements are a standard high-school
course plus two years of college work. A reading knowledge of the English
language is required of most students but is not essential. Letters of recommen-
dation from Premier Mussolini or one of the Lanzetti boys will be given utmost
consideration if the candidate looks all right to Clara.
The Hahnemann Medical College struggles valiantly to conform with the
educational standards of the A. M. A. The aptitude test is not essential but the
college reserves the right to decide the psychical and physical fitness of the in-
dividual applicant for the study of medicine. Vide — some of the Dean's hand-
picked men, the cream of the crap.
Students will not be admitted to medical courses with any deficiencies in the
requirements with the exception of general mental ability and knowledge of the
English language.
REQUIREMENTS FOR ADMISSION TO ADVANCED STANDING
The applicant (Davis) for advanced standing must: (a) Have been refused
admission at some previous time, (b) Have substituted the first two years in some
dominant school, (c) swear by homeopathy and sneer at the rest of the world.
Sell. Is a real "square-head" from the land of Klopp and Hoffman. We sure
wish that he would take some lessons in smiling — the old pickle-puss.
CHARLES WILLIAM BRUTON
948 N. 43rd Street, Philadelphia, Pa.
Temple University
Hahnemann Hospital
Pennsylvania
General practice
EDWARD ST.
105 W. 57th Street, Bayonne, N
University of Alabama
Hahnemann Hospital
Southern California
Brain Surgery
JAMES CALABRESE
J.
OCTAVIO ANTHONY CAPRIOTTI
1811 S. 18th Street, Philadelphia, Pa.
University of Pennsylvania
Hahnemann Hospital
Philadelphia, Pa.
Ophthalmology
REQUIREMENTS FOR PROMOTION
1. Make friends with the Dean, or
2. Must have a friend on the Board of Trustees, or
3. Must clean Chandler's test tubes, or
4. Must stooge for Bernstein, or
5. Must crib the exams, or
6. Must study like hell and finally, when the four years are completed, be
too damn tired to enjoy life.
7. If a student fails in more than two major subjects the executive com-
mittee shall investigate his case and decide his fitness to take examinations for ad-
vanced standing. If he has the drag mentioned in parts 1 to 4, above, he will be
granted this privilege no matter how many major courses he has failed to pass.
8. Students failing promotion by reason of unsatisfactory scholarship
will be declined further registration in the College — oh, yeah?
REQUIREMENTS FOR GRADUATION
The candidate for graduation must be at least 21 years of age, moral char-
acter of no consequence. He must have applied himself to the study of medicine
for four separate years — oh, yeah?
The student who has met the above requirements will, at the end of his
senior year, be recommended to Herr von Rapp for graduation.
REQUIREMENTS FOR PRACTICE
Though not a part of the college course, it is important for students of
medicine to know that the State of Pennsylvania now requires of applicants for
Dunn. "Diplomacy" will size up Cedric in one word.
WILLIAM JAMES CAREY
Girardville, Pa.
La Salle College
Hahnemann Hospital
Pennsylvania
Gynecology
PETER JOSEPH CASTERLINE
335 Susguehanna Avenue, Wyoming, Pa.
Notre Dame University
Wyoming Valley Homeopathic, Wilkes-Barre,
Pa.
Pennsylvania
Obstetrics
JAMES JOHN CHIAPPETTA
99 Woodward Street, Rochester, N. Y.
University of Rochester
Hahnemann Hospital
Rochester, N. Y.
General practice
medical licensure evidence of a year's hospital service, or equivalent thereof
(Hahnemann), in addition to the college diploma.
FEES AND EXPENSES
Matriculation $5.00
Tuition fees, each year 400.00
Graduation fee, not returnable 25.00
In each year there is a laboratory charge of $25.00. These fees cover only
the ordinary material supplied in all the laboratories of the college and hospital.
This means $100.00 per four years from each student. The big, deep mystery is,
where does the balance go?
In addition a caution fee of $15.00 per year is required from each student
of which he receives next to nothing at the end of the year. Where does this go?
CONDUCT
Students are expected to observe such rules of decorum and order in the
lecture rooms, laboratories and halls of the college and in the hospital and dis-
pensaries, as are becoming gentlemen. The faculty reserves the right to dismiss
any student from the college for immoral or disreputable conduct, or mental
unfitness for the medical profession.
EQUIPMENT AND FACILITIES
LOCATION
The property of the corporation is located in a select district of Phila-
delphia. The campus is bounded on the east by Broad Street, on the west by
Leigh. Hot-cha! Hot-cha! Our little boy with the big personality goes into his
dance. Race track suits and big smiles will always remind us of Joe.
ANTHONY GENNARO CIAVARELLI
234 Rose Mary Avenue, Ambler, Pa.
Gettysburg College
Women's Homeopathic Hospital, Philadelphia
Pennsylvania
General practice
AUGUSTUS HENRY CLAGETT, JR.
Drexel Hill, Pa.
University of Pennsylvania
Wilmington Homeopathic Hospital
Pennsylvania
General practice
VICTOR JOHN COVALESKY
711 W. Market Street, Scranton, Pa.
St. Thomas College
Wilmington Homeopathic Hospital
Scranton
General practice
Nineteenth Street, on the north by Green Street and on the south by South
Street.
The college building is on Fifteenth Street between Race and Vine. Next to
the college is the Nurses' Home and just above this is the Fish House. The
hospital faces Broad Street and the Fire House rests in the center of this cluster.
This group of buildings has often been referred to as "Villa von Rapp." The
other three points of interest on the campus are: H and H (Hiccough and Heart-
burn), which is just to the north of the hospital on Broad Street; The Pansy Club
at Broad and Ridge and the Headquarters for the U. S. U. C. S. (United States
Union of Consolidated Stooges), which has its main office at 1816 Pine Street.
THE COLLEGE
The college building is a splendid specimen of Oklahoma Colonial archi-
tecture. The basement contains a lecture room, an autopsy table, the "College
Rook Store" and a telephone booth.
The front of the first floor contains the cage, the den, the hangout for
homesick Latin scholars on one side and the wigwam on the other. The back of
the first floor, which is holy ground, is separated from the front by a stack of
books.
The second floor contains a lecture room, histology laboratories, George's
Cigar Shop and the anatomy dissecting rooms, where Phillips plays hide-and-
seek with the freshmen and sophomores. This floor also houses the anatomical
museum, containing, among other famous relics, the largest organ in the world.
Clagett. Judging from the facial expressions, Henry has too long been the buddy
of one Sell. Early in our confinement Henry was known for his powerful
voice, leading us all in our overtures. His deep affection for Chandler
and Ciavarelli will long be remembered.
RAYMOND D. CRAMER
85-40 164th Street, Jamaica, Long Island, N.
Lafayette College
Wilmington Homeopathic Hospital
Pennsylvania
Pediatrics
SALVATORE CUCINOTTA
814 S. 9th Street, Philadelphia, Pa.
Villanova College
St. Agnes' Hospital, Philadelphia
Philadelphia
Obstetrics
ESKER WILLIAM CULLEN
Portage, Pa.
University of Pittsburgh
Mercy Hospital, Altoona, Pa.
Pennsylvania
Internal Medicine
The third floor is delightful and contains, in addition to Chandler, the rest
of the Marx Brothers, all pervaded with a terrible odor (we mean the floor, of
course, of course). The walls and ceilings of this floor tell the tale of innumerable
ether catastrophes, and, as one views the windows and doors, there is a feeling
that the occupants were restrained by steel bars.
The fourth floor contains Flanagan, frogs and Pharmacology.
THE HOSPITAL
Two noteworthy dens on the first floor belong to Herr von Rapp and
"Barnacle Bill" Plummer, our polite director. Part of this floor and the entire
second floor are the private domain of Sadie Fine, (von Rapp's little girl also
plays around on the second floor, but nobody pays any attention to her.) Of the
remaining floors at least half are vacant, but it would not be surprising if one floor
were turned into living guarters for the orderlies.
AFFILIATED HOSPITALS
The mansions of Klopp and Roman are affiliated for teaching purposes.
Kavans and Evanaugh. The Water Pistol Boys — ham and eggs. These men are outstanding
in our class. Evans has the cutest curls and Kavanaugh the biggest
fanny. Why should a Lancaster County Dutchman try to bluff Wiscon-
sin? We know him. The boys are en-DOW-ed with a farmer, BRUTON
by name, who digs his knowledge when required and passes it merrily
on. The future will find Kavanaugh co-professor of projection — well,
five years' experience means a lot.
Monaco. Rudolph Rassendale, II. Will we ever forget Sam ligating the left leg
of a frog and amputating the right? Well, after all, the best way to
learn is by experience and after rooming with Tony for four years,
Sam should have plenty of this.
DONALD ALLAN DAVIS
1772 Barr Avenue, Crafton Station, Pittsburgh, Pa.
University of Pittsburgh
Huron Road Hospital, Cleveland, Ohio
Derby, Conn.
Chronic Diseases
ALFRED MICHAEL DI GIACOMO
1500 E. Passyunk Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa.
St. Joseph's College
Hahnemann Hospital
Philadelphia
General practice
CHARLES HARRIS DOW
J.
400 Linden Avenue, Haddonfield, N.
Temple University
West Jersey Homeopathic Hospital, Camden,
N. J.
New Jersey
General practice
GENERAL PLAN OF INSTRUCTION
ANATOMY
"Tommy" Phillips — to a generation of Hahneman-
iacs; "Gentlemen, the Clavicle" — his famous
bon mot.
"Bill" Sylvis — paradoxical — mercurial — always
ready for a fight or a frolic — a swell slogan
for a swell guy.
"Tommy" Snyder— our first major impression and a
good one.
"Sholly" (we have omitted the Clarence) — hand-
some and humble.
"Kimmel" — projectionist, palaverer, "play-boy,"
kibitzer.
Embryology and Histology. Here the first baptism under fire. Names,
new, long and imposing. Slides to look at, slides to draw. When would we ever
have studied our chemistry had it not been for the good old Histology "lab"
periods? Histology, where the least common denominator of any given organ is
conveniently and impressively reduced to a succession of serial sections.
Embryology, a procession of turns, twists, gyrations, detours and the ultimate
product arrived at in a most miraculous manner. But we did study the stuff, you
bet your life we did, and why — Friday quizzes — remember? Drawings in the
course enjoy a certain perpetuity, that is the better ones of previous years are
Cramer. Remembered for his imitation of the old maestro. Ray traces his
paternal ancestry back to that old Swiss, William Tell, and his mother
was a true daughter of Eve. Legitimately born was his passion for the
forbidden fruit.
PHILIP LEE DUNKLE
Hebron, New Hampshire
Oberlin College
Homeopathic Hospital of Rhode Island, Provi-
dence, R. I.
Southern New England
Psychiatry
CEDRIC ERROL DUNN
1314 Sixth Avenue, Beaver Mills, Pa.
Geneva College
Pittsburgh Homeopathic Hospital
Pennsylvania
General practice
MICHAEL HAROLD DURANTE
178 Wilder Street, Rochester, N. Y.
Alfred University
Bethesda Hospital, Cincinnati, Ohio
Rochester, New York
General practice
dusted off, copied (tsk, tsk), embellished and handed in as of the present inst.
The laboratory final, with Joe Hepburn the official minute keeper, resembled a
somewhat glorified obstacle race and was lots of fun. Thanks for at least leaving
the slide on the stage even though the specimen could not be found until just
before the bell rang. The final exam with "Tommy," stop watch et al., forever
endeared us to him and helped to dispel for almost all time the fear of orals with
the big boys.
Osteology, Syndesmology (joints, thanks) and Myology. A bag of bones
and a hank of hair. No, children, the bag of bones will cost the osteophyte just
six bones, bucks, pardon me. Anatomy is taught by Dr. Phillips in group reci-
tatives, these incantations having a most soporific effect on the more primitive
members of the class. If there is anything worse than the first class in the A. M.
it must be the first class following lunch.
Angeiology and Neurology. Introducing "Bill" Sylvis — in March at
that. Always way ahead of us, shaming us in our ignorance, "Bill's" enthusiasm
for the job in hand won us though we knew not what the course was about. The
final exam found yours truly describing the ear after not too little time spent in
trailing a few of these lashes of branches to their destiny. Sic transit. But, as
Sammy Pepys might say, was very grateful that was not called to recite before
the class.
Dissection- Blue-blooded cadavers, carefully groomed, awaited us. The
horrors of dissecting rooms are made known thru song and story and our very
blood, not blue, chilled in anticipation. The laboratory again affords an excellent
opportunity to catch up on most anything that needed being caught up on.
Bierwirth. A born politician with a quick wit was our prexy for the first two years.
RALPH PORTER EARLE
Aldan, Pa.
University of Pennsylvania
Hahnemann Hospital of Worcester, Mass.
Vinalhaven, Maine
General practice
THEODORE WILLIAM EASTLAND
510 Main Street, Portage, Pa.
University of Pittsburgh
Reading Homeopathic Hospital
Pennsylvania
General practice
HARRY EISENBERG
36 Joralemon Street, Belleville, N. J.
Bucknell University
Hahnemann Hospital
Belleville, N. J.
General practice
Sort of builder-upper. Dr. Phillips and his ravens often interrupted our contem-
plation of the finer things with their "Are you men ready for a quiz?"
And so far into the Sophomore year, knowing less and less detail, we
string along, lectures here, drawings there, recitations and reviews. Trick ques-
tions galore, and did we answer them? Not correctly, perhaps, but always there
was an answer. The stimulus to study the subject was rather killed by a surfeit
of material and time devoted when we were not so appreciative.
Rocco. Some cheerful sophomore four years ago told Rocco to watch out
so he picked out Tomasco and shadowed him for four years.
Neber. Ernie can hand it out but can he take it? No! When all else is for-
gotten we will still remember "Oh! Mona" and that Illinois twang
ringing out during a "written."
Kansak. The sound of this name brings back memories of lilies of the valley,
gardenias, and Bernstein's Hair Tonic. Three long cheers for Kansak —
WICKEY! WACKEY! KANSAKY! This should always be followed
by a chorus of "My Bonnie Lies Over the Ocean" or "Keep the Pine
Fires Bern-ing."
.au and Yee. Joe and Cy are outstanding in their guiet ways and good manners. Per-
fect gentlemen. We wonder what attraction New York holds for Joe
when he is such a big shot at Wai-ki-ki. Both are excellent students,
doing summer work at Michigan. Cy excels at golf and we advise you
never to double his four spades. Joe plays left field as this brings him
next to the bleachers and the fair sex.
Hazzard. Grand stooge of the stooges consolidated and Master of the tall story
club. This guiet and unassuming soul suddenly blossomed forth during
the Junior year to the surprise of everyone but Clagett and a certain
Dermatologist on Pine Street. The noted eguestrian who through the
bull murmured, "I to myself am dearer than a friend."
JOSEPH CHARLES ELIA
1344 Ashland Avenue, Niagara Falls, N.
University of Pittsburgh
St. Mary's Hospital, Rochester, N. Y.
New York
Surgery
WILLIAM ELLIS
Island Heights, N. J.
Colgate University
Hahnemann Hospital
New Jersey
General practice
PETER CHRISTOS HARRIS ERINAKES
23 Washington Street, W. Warwick, R. I.
Brown University
Worcester Hahnemann Hospital, Worcester,
Mass.
W. Warwick, R. I.
General practice
CHEMISTRY
Wig wAg Pearson — "piled to the right of him, piled
to the left of him, while we, ever in front of
him, patiently waited — Noble 9.00."
"Mousey" Joe Hepburn — pity the brains of the
Department are hidden behind those blue
eyes, unkempt hair and FuManchu fingernails.
Joseph Chandler — always in a hurry, never getting
anywhere! "Ether" Chandler had no appreci-
ation of relative values or he missed his calling
as an inventory clerk.
Nathan Griffith — so he was lecturing on chemistry?
William Schmidt — Grand Sachem Ippewa! Little
wonder that he spoke so learnedly on Ph
(typographical error).
Edwin Hicks — the oracle of the Department. Hidden
high in the hills of the English library, ven-
turing forth occasionally to render confusing
some simple basic principle.
Hiram Francis Hicks — accompanied by the fluttering
wings of a stork, he gently whispered "Salava."
FIRST YEAR — ALL YEAR
Physiological Chemistry. Before this therapy is instituted the student
body is subjected to a short review course. The Dean establishes the "law of
Ciavarelli. 'The maestro of the rope" describes this diminutive gentleman per-
fectly. Such nice oily hair crowning that serious professional look has
all the earmarks of a big shot.
Marquis. Dunn's stooge.
HARRY DAVIDSON EVANS, JR.
1120 N. 63rd Street, Philadelphia, Pa.
Villanova College
Hahnemann Hospital
Philadelphia
General practice
BENJAMIN LEONARD FALCONE
652 N. 8th Street, Bangor, Pa.
Pennsylvania State College
Hahnemann Hospital
Norristown, Pa.
General practice and Anaesthesia
HARRY EVERETT FRIDRICH
4728 Browning Road, Merchantville, N. J.
Temple University
Hahnemann Hospital
New Jersey
Surgery
averages" by speaking of normality and fractions of normality and the Major
with the croix de guerre swiftly destroys what little respect we harbor for organic
chemistry by drawing hieroglyphics and occult hexagons. The student is then
fed up with a voluminous knowledge of Fats, Carbohydrates, Proteins, Enzymes,
Hormones and Tissues and finally briskly purged. Taken all in all it is quite
griping!
Clinical Chemistry. Having become thoroughly acquainted with the
"elemental" nature of man and of the matter which he ingests, and having ob-
tained the results of a thorough purging upon which to begin investigation, we
now take up the study of that for which man has no more earthly need: Urine,
Saliva, Feces, Esbach, Erlenmeyer, Van Slyke, Keldahl. Quel fumier!
Biophysics and Physical Chemistry. "Schmidty" did his best to let us
know what it was all about. He was a game loser and graciously accepted our
box of cigars. We parted as we had met, only a few of us wondered — wondered
what?
SECOND YEAR — HIT 'EM AGAIN, THEY'RE STILL BREATHING
Toxicology. We had survived the summer. With the passing of the "B"
bile had gone our melancholy. Now to evade all "lab" work, save by the
cellulose-graphitic method and to memorize that list of doses, promptly to be
forgotten. Not so Toxicology! Questions of the first year were again ventured —
is this a medical school?
Medical Jurisprudence. In accordance with the dictates of modern
educators, that only the true fact must be presented, that no good can come from
error, we were penalized for the abortion we could not perform and convicted
Tate. Tatarsky. Remember?
ANTHONY LAWRENCE FRYE
Sharpsville, Pa.
University of Alabama
St. Vincent's Hospital, Erie, Pa.
Pennsylvania
Obstetrics and Gynecology
HERMAN ELMER GAUMER
911 Lindley Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa.
Pennsylvania State College
St. Luke's and Children's Hospital, Philadelphia
United States Navy
General Practice
EDWARD MYLER GLASSBURN
929 Wellesley Road, Pittsburgh, Pa.
Pennsylvania State College
Pittsburgh Homeopathic Hospital
Pittsburgh
Internal Medicine
of negligence toward the patient we had not yet seen — or was this really an
advanced course in chemistry?
GRADUATE COURSES
Since no one who has been successfully graduated would be inclined to
again put his head in the noose, let us pass this off as research work.
TEXT-BOOKS
Pearson and Hepburn's "Physiological and Clinical Chemistry," Pearson
and Hepburn's "Toxicology" — well, let's give Joe the credit for the blank pages
anyway!
Earle. Ralph fell for Homeopathy in a big way. Barney said that he was just a
faddist but those of us who know Earle (and Barney, too) realize that
there is virtue in earnestness. When Ralph comes down to earth we feel
sure that he will be a real doctor.
Falcone. Ben is inseparable from "Small Fry." His natural poise plus a Penn
State training has made him absolutely irresistible to the ladies.
Moore. Ken's imitations of a big shot are really guite good. Some say that
Lady Luck is Ken's best friend. Well, we wish him luck for the coming
year at the Country Club and pray he doesn't maintain that bored
attitude while waiting for cases.
Carey. Bill plays and works hard. His classroom manners are those of a
gentleman; his extracurricular joviality is that of a good-fellow-well-met.
Casterline. Our husky coal-cracker had better watch that he doesn't get cracked.
Pete has a habit of talking out of turn which is a poor policy for such a
dainty lad.
Hudson. Sampson is strong on O.P. cigarettes, saving his money for gaudy ties.
Tuck up your lower lip, Howie.
RICHARD HAWORTH GOLLINGS
Gerome, Pa.
Pennsylvania State College
Pittsburgh Homeopathic Hospital
Western Pennsylvania
General practice
GEORGE LEAL GOMEZ
72 Crapo Street, New Bedford, Mass.
Providence College
Wilmington Homeopathic Hospital
Boston, Mass.
Obstetrics
MELVIN ALBERT GREER
N.J.
144 Midland Avenue, Glen Ridge
Ursinus College
Passaic General Hospital, Passaic, N. J
New Jersey
General practice
PHYSIOLOGY
"Deep-sea Dan" Widman — "at the close of my
last lecture, gentlemen, . ."
"Lycopodium Joe" Hepburn — "A great man must
be able to answer all questions."
"Great" Scott— What have we here!
(Hydrocephalus?)
George "Unhappy" King.
"Tom" Vischer— "Now Doctor!"
"Horace" Franklin Flanagan — pants higher than
a kite.
Francis James — quite harmless, quite aware of it.
Theodore W. Battafarano, M.D. Assistant in Physi-
ology— and how!
Physiology. "Deep-sea Dan" opened by closing his last lecture, fearing
that the final syllables might have become entangled in the elaborate electrical
apparatus into which he whispered, while the class read Howell. Occasionally,
when he had to audit the books, one Dr. Scott, who made no strenuous effort to
conceal his receding hair line, placed the boutonniere in his lapel and spoke of
conditioned reflexes. In the laboratory the young Franklin asserted himself,
accepting no kimographic tracings unless the carbon items were arranged in
military rows. Battafarano — well, we won't tell on him for he is probably still
functioning as a godsend to poor suffering sophomores. For some reason the
student never wished to disturb James or Vischer — they seemed so vitally
interested in their discussion of current events. Thank God for frogs! How could
Bowen. Grand Chief of the "Rumor Clinic." Bob promises to be the true para-
noiac of our class if something else doesn't get him first.
JAMES EDWARD HADLEY
503 W. 3rd Street, Oil City, Pa.
Washington and Jefferson College
Pittsburgh Homeopathic Hospital
Oil City
General practice
EMIL LAWRENCE HARASYM
2915 N. 6th Street, Philadelphia, Pa.
St. Joseph's College
St. Luke's and Children's Hospital, Philadelphia
Philadelphia
Internal Medicine
WILLIAM ROBINSON HAZZARD, JR.
1 1 1 Childs Avenue, Drexel Hill, Pa.
La Salle College
Wilmington Homeopathic Hospital
Delaware
Obstetrics and Gynecology
this department function without the gastrocnemius and — what was the name of
that big nerve? — no, not Flanagan! But when frogs were scarce — remember try-
ing to smother each other producing experimental dyspnoea? We learned later
that this was the specific action of the gas anaesthetist. And always those damn
drums — in those days we knew nothing of carbo veg. and carbo an. We know
nothing today!
PATHOLOGY, BACTERIOLOGY AND HYGIENE
Samuel "Zeus" Sappington
O. F. "Baron" Barthmaier
Grant "Autopsy" Favorite
H. "Russ" Fisher
David "Sludge" Horn
Hunter "Sousa" Cook
"U. S. N." Dickinson
Bacteriology. It is not until the second year that the students are herded
into the mysterious regions whence issue "Sam's American Beauties." After each
classically perfect lecture on the motility, futility and ferocity of the various
"bugs," the students repair to the laboratories where they are taught the funda-
mentals of domestic science.
General and Medical Pathology. After experiencing the first of a set of
never-to-be-forgotten oral inquisitions, the class begins its study of pathology
divided as follows: Lectures three hours weekly on fatty degeneration of the
brain, etc.; Laboratory six hours weekly during which time the members of the class
discuss summer experiences and amatory conquests while keeping a closed eye
glued to the microscope. Examinations in these subjects are conducted in such
Gollings. We, too, are glad your picture was taken before Christmas.
HENRY MONROE HESSION
1121 S. Wilton Street, Philadelphia, Pa.
St. Joseph's College
Women's Homeopathic Hospital, Philadelphia
Pennsylvania
General practice
CHARLES HENRY HODGKINS, JR.
S. Rowland Road, Fairhill, Conn.
Pennsylvania State College
Hahnemann Hospital
Pennsylvania
General practice
H *
JOHN ALBERT HOFFA
Dushone, Pa.
Temple University
Hahnemann Hospital
Montgomery County, Pa.
Obstetrics and general practice
a manner as to prove that the tales of horror related to quivering freshmen are
not exaggerated.
Clinical Pathology. In the third year the fortunate but calloused veterans
receive a course in clinical pathology which embodies the more odious tid-bits
of chemistry with Neurological, Ophthalmological and Gynecological Pathology
thrown in for good measure.
Surgical Pathology. A series of three-hour sessions during which the
class dozes after a hearty lunch. In return for this privilege it is customary for
the student body to politely pretend ignorance when "Whispering Bill" asks
dramatically "Where do you think the bullet went?"
Autopsy. "Fourteen men on a dead man's chest,
Yo-ho-ho and a bottle of rum"
Hygiene. The college is pleased to announce that it has again secured
the services of D. "Sludge" Horn to direct the combined lunior-Senior circus.
This authority on out-house engineering feels that in the future he should be
required to face an airplane barrage from only one class at a time.
Gynecological Pathology. Dr. Fisher points to fly specks and cracks on
the wall which indicate to him degenerative strawberry cervix, while Lafferty
fumbles with the slides and leers at the students.
Immunology. Dr. Sappington amiably and masterfully leads the class
deep into the maze of immunology. His questions evince a wonderful sense of
humor. The proper answer on a student's paper indicates that he has found the
place in the notes.
Covalesky. Vic is going to surprise us one of these days and speak without being
spoken to. 'The quietest man in the class" — refreshingly unique in our
group of "many wagging tongues."
HOWARD SAMPSON HUDSON
Pleasantville, N. J.
Washington and Lee University
St. Luke's and Children's Hospital, Philadelphia
Philadelphia
General practice
DONALD JACK JONES
Bradford, Pa.
University of Pennsylvania
San Francisco City and County Hospital
California
General practice
HARRY ALEXANDER KANSAK
811 Kirkwood Street, Wilmington, Del.
Washington College
Wilmington Homeopathic Hospital
Delaware
General practice
MEDICINE
G. Harlan Wells, M. D.
Professor "Barney," always second place
"Bill" Williams
"Joe" McEldowney
"Shorty" Ferguson
E. Roland Snader, Jr., M. D., F. A. C. P.
"British" Geckeler
"Charley" White, Professor of English recitation
"Lead Poisoning" Larer, Bridesmaid to Roman
"Jake" Crellin
"Smoothie" Kirby
"Moe" Fitterman
FIRST YEAR
History and Institutes of Medicine. Dr. Roman. A course intended for
students of foreign languages in which the listener gleans, with other facts, that
Ask-coo-lay-pee-us was a great man.
SECOND YEAR
Normal Physical Diagnosis. Dr. White's classical readings brought out
the artistic temperament in our souls. We wonder if he ever has been invited
to read poetry to an old ladies' literary club. This course shamed some of the
boys into an otherwise neglected bath — ink stains are tell-tale. "Dr. White em-
ploys the stethophone in teaching heart and breath sounds."
Dunkle. Phil, charter member of the Wednesday matinee club. Bring your
dates to Hahnemann. Where do you find them, Dunkle?
JULIUS HARRY KATZ
308 Warren Street, Beverly, N. J.
University of Pennsylvania
Hahnemann Hospital
New Jersey
General practice and Dermatology
SAMUEL HERSTHEL KATZ
6443 N. 16th Street, Philadelphia, Pa.
Villanova College
St. Luke's and Children's Hospital, Philadelphia
Philadelphia
Internal Medicine
WILLIAM RAMSEY KAVANAUGH
2081 N. 63rd Street, Philadelphia, Pa.
Franklin and Marshall College
Hahnemann Hospital
Ohio
Pediatrics and general practice
Applied Science in Medicine. Dr. Kirby. A rose among thorns. All of
us recognized a touch of the master during the cardiac lectures. Kirby was
going to be damned sure nobody cribbed in his final, but he is an amateur proctor
and some of the boys are — well, let's forget it.
THIRD YEAR
Practice of Medicine. Drs. Ferguson and Snader. "Fergie." "High caloric
liguid diet, bed rest, and good nursing care," mixed with "Did you hear about
Mae West?" will always remind us of "Shorty" Ferguson. If room B had suddenly
been changed into a court-room, Attorney Ferguson would have fitted the
picture perfectly.
Snader. Another reader in the medical department. Too bad he happened
to tell us of his thirty specific remedies for colds while he was suffering from the
same and using some Sears, Roebuck preparation. However, we will ever re-
member Snader as a gentleman.
Medical Clinics. For the most part very uninteresting and a total waste
of time. Hard seats and gown throwing were featured.
General Medical Diagnosis. Dr. Lane. Although the notes were con-
stantly referred to, this course was good stuff and right to the point.
Medicine. Dr. Fiterman. Two hours a week to one-third sections should
be changed to two hours a year. "You fellers get all dis stuff when ya get out.
Why bodder wid it now?"
Electrocardiography. Dr. George Geckeler. Dear! Dear! Charter member
of the Pansy Club. Do gardenias, stogies, and salmon-colored socks go together?
They certainly do when our boy "George" goes to town. "Act Natural" was the
doctor's advice to us. Well, it has been said that a doctor makes the worst kind
of patient.
Selsman. Balin's color-blind stooge.
GEORGE JOHN KOHUT
834 Scott Street, Dickson City, Pa.
Pennsylvania State College
Hahnemann Hospital, Scranton
Binghamton, N. Y.
Gynecological Surgery
GEORGE LATAIF
2 Ives Street, Danbury, Conn.
Syracuse University
Homeopathic Hospital of Rhode Island, Provi-
dence, R. I.
New England
General practice
JOSEPH F. C. LAU
Honolulu, Hawaii
Washington and Jefferson College
The William McKinley Memorial Hospital
Trenton, N. J.
Obstetrics and Gynecology
Physical Diagnosis. Dr. McEldowney and associates. Our first strut
through the wards with that six-months-old stethoscope gave us one of the biggest
thrills of the third year.
FOURTH YEAR
Practice of Medicine. Drs. Wells and Snader. Two lectures each week
covering all of the material presented during the third year, occasionally push-
ing forward with consideration of a disease new to us. We went halfway through
the fourth year before we had a lecture on a very important subject — nephritis.
Tropical Medicine. Industrial Medicine, Dietetics and Endocrinology.
Tropical medicine was over-emphasized, as is everything the Dean meddles with.
Endocrinology was more of Snader and, coming near the end of the year, was a
terrible bore. Dietetics, the most practical course as far as G. P. goes, was en-
tirely disregarded. Industrial medicine was capably handled by Dr. Larer.
Hospital Instruction. Ten weeks of Wells and Williams clawing at each
other's throats. What one said one day the other was sure to contradict the next.
Kirby made it interesting by keeping us wondering whether he would O. K.
our histories and exempt us from the final. History taking and boiling urine
passed the time away, but we really believe that this was the most instructive ten
weeks of the senior year.
Dermatology. Drs. Bernstein and Wittman.
Individual Dispensary Work. Mabel Whalen reigns supreme as Queen
of the Rat Race. At the beginning of our senior year "Jake" Crelling abdicated
in favor of "Ducky" Lane, which only goes to prove that "Men may come and
men may go but Mabel goes on forever." It matters little who teaches us medicine
or goes over our cases with us, it is always Mabel who keeps us waiting fifteen
Iropea.
Always in the know — the inveterate ward leader of the Circolo.
JOSEPH RIDDICK LEIGH
4902 Colonial Avenue, Norfolk, Va.
William and Mary College
Pottsville General Hospital
Pennsylvania
General practice
ANTHONY FRANCIS MAGOLDA
532 Arbor Avenue, Vineland, N. J.
Villanova College
West Jersey Homeopathic Hospital, Camden,
N.J.
New Jersey
General practice
FRANK S. MAINELLA
53 Hinsdale Street, Brooklyn, N.
University of Pennsylvania
Unity Hospital, Brooklyn, N. Y.
New York City
Internal Medicine
minutes for a urinalysis while she chats with some chance acquaintance.
Mabel sees everything, talks about everything, but knows nothing. Long live
the Queen! May she antagonize other poor sinners who follow in a like manner.
Heaven help those who are yet to come.
Text-book. "Bernie's" Notes— 99 pages. Price— $4.00.
Reference Book. Steven's Manual. 685 pages. Price — $3.50.
PEDIATRICS
C. "Toxoid" Raue
"6x" Fletcher
J. "Slumber Hour" Redman
"Al-Lou Vicious" Blakely
Diseases of Children. Dr. Redman. Thirty-two lectures and recitations
(by Redman) in which he murmurs vaguely about infants, preventive pediatrics
(thought that was obstetrics) and the more important diseases of childhood such
as aortic aneurysm, Kali Azar and hives.
Clinical Pediatrics. Dr. Raue. Sixteen lectures amply illustrated by cases
of children who no longer have the disease.
Out-Patient Department. Staff. Here the future pediatrician learns to
evade nimbly the urinary efforts of the dear little patients who ever seek to pro-
claim their skill at soaking the unwary. Through grim and damp experience one
learns to maintain a strategic position behind the adoring mother.
Schaeffer. A Hahnemann son going into the heart of the enemy's country — at
P. G. H. Hobby — Digging out Gastrocnemius with a Mashie.
Ellis. Big Bill, a monstrous man on two monstrous feet. One of those rare
cases where brawn and brain do co-exist in harmony.
ROBERT A. MARQUIS
444 Market Street, Beaver, Pa.
University of Pittsburgh
Pittsburgh Homeopathic Hospital
Pittsburgh
General practice
DANIEL MARIO MASSEY
196 Harriet Street, Bridgeport, Conn.
Columbia University-
Bridgeport Hospital
Bridgeport, Conn.
General practice
SAVERIO ANTHONY MONACO
322 Littleton Avenue, Newark, N. J.
Fordham University-
Elizabeth General Hospital, Elizabeth, N. J.
Newark, N. J.
General practice
GASTROENTEROLOGY
H. M. Eberhard — his Excellency of the belly-ache.
"George" Lorenz "they never die from G. I. ailments."
"Les" Bower — he from Reilly's flats.
FOURTH YEAR
The amenities of practicing medicine among the wealthy are well de-
scribed to us. Hurried mid-winter dashes to Florida with a gouty patient (crates
of Sunkist for the toilers back home). Hop over to Gotham for a G. I. dinner at
which time, apparently, and also contrary to the general rule, they actually
discuss G. I. problems. Eye-witness accounts of the most recent European tech-
nique keep us up to the minute. Why is the continental influence so pronounced
in the G. I. field? The insidious influence of the American radio?
Dr. Lorenz, with his accustomed enthusiasm for the job in hand, untangled
a few of the knots of constipation for us.
Dr. Ricketts, in his very thoroughest manner, explains to the student that
the pain the patient is feeling in the McBurney region is probably due to a
thrombo-angiitis obliterans of the sixteenth left intercostal artery.
We leave this special field with the same impression we did other special
fields, namely, all human ills can be successfully put into the category of that
particular one.
Eisenberg. Jovial — good-natured. Harry is our combination tablet of sulphur
and calcarea carb, with a tincture of humor thrown in. We know
his patients will swear by the therapeutic value of his grin.
Fridrich. With a background of an interneship in Psychiatry it will be a cinch
for Harry to pick out the 80% of neurotics that will come into his
office. Ask him if he knows anything about Allentown besides Psychiatry.
KENNETH THOMPSON MOORE
128 Fern Avenue, Collingswood, N. J.
University of Pennsylvania
Homeopathic Hospital of Rhode Island, Provi-
dence, R. I.
New England
General Medicine
PIUS ANTHONY NARKIEWICZ
432 Lytle Street, Minersville, Pa.
Pennsylvania State College
Pottsville Hospital
Pennsylvania
Obstetrics
ERNEST NEWTON NEBER, JR.
909 S. Normal Avenue, Carbondale, 111.
University of Illinois
St. Louis City Hospital, St. Louis, Mo.
Oklahoma
General practice
NEUROLOGY AND PSYCHIATRY
"Steinie" Steinhilber, O. K. The professor with the
short and sweet lectures.
"Noddy" Klopp, P. U. Chief Squirrel (nuts, get it?).
"Baron" Hoffman. Dramatic, but good.
"Chippey" Neff. The boy soprano.
"Barrymore" Metzger. The villain.
"Pretty Boy" Sooy.
THIRD YEAR
Neurological Diagnosis and Diseases. Dr. Steinhilber. A set of thirty-two
well organized and interesting lectures by a man who commanded respect and
confidence with the unusual but delightful manner of coming right to the point
without a lot of bull.
FOURTH YEAR
Mental Diseases. Dr. Klopp. Fourteen hours of time thrown to eternity.
"A touch of madness still makes the whole world kin." "Nature, too unkind,
that made no medicine for a troubled mind." We again wonder who is "nuts"
— patient or professor.
Oh, see the happy moron,
He doesn't give a damn;
I wish I was a moron,
My God, perhaps I am.
Ward Work. Lectures to the point by Dr. Hoffman, also interesting.
Ward walks of benefit only to the chosen few who are near the instructor.
Massey. Early in his career Danny learned that you can go a long way by merely
keeping quiet.
PAUL JAMES PARIS
Murray, Utah
University of Utah
Mercy Hospital, Altoona, Pa.
State of Washington
General practice
HARRY ASHER PINSKY
1525 Baird Avenue, Camden, N. J.
University of Pennsylvania
St. Luke's and Children's Hospital, Philadelphia
Philadelphia
General practice
MORRIS JOSEPH PODELL
Philadelphia, Pa.
Temple University
St. Luke's and Children's Hospital, Philadelphia
Philadelphia
General practice
Neurological Clinics. Dr. Steinhilber. The most instructive and interest-
ing clinics afforded to the student throughout his four years of work. For the
student, by the student, and yet under competent supervision.
Wards and Dispensary. A waste of time. Three weeks of word games,
matching pennies and what not. The great wealth of material going through this
department could be utilized to greater advantage if more properly supervised.
MATERIA MEDICA AND THERAPEUTICS
"Garth"
J. "Shadow" Frank
Eugene "Pain," M. A.
J. "Salesman" Klain
"Little Jesus" Young
Hering Laboratory
Director "Garth"
Assistant Directors: "Little Joe," "Little Jesus"
The course in "Materiar Medicar" and therapeutics extends throughout
the entire four years. In fact it will haunt you for years to come.
During the first year the fascinating Dr. Boericke reads his "Principles
of Homeopathy" to the class. Dr. Borneman teaches the class how to make cold
cream suppositories and aromatic elixirs (for novel cocktail effects) and then
takes the class on a field trip. This excursion into the heart of nature (Norwood)
is a pleasant experience and grateful students are usually seen towards the end
of the day strewn about the countryside surrounded by empty beer bottles.
Tepper. Allow us to present — Tepper and Schwartz — Hahnemann's Damon
and Pythias.
IRVING REDLER
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Albright College
Trinity Hospital
Brooklyn, N. Y.
General practice
IAMES HERBERT REINISH
5620 N. 19th Street, Philadelphia, Pa.
Temple University
St. Luke's and Children's Hospital, Philadelphia
Pennsylvania
General practice
FRANK JOHN ROBERTSON, 3rd
2 Greenwood Avenue, Wyncote, Pa.
Duke University
Hahnemann Hospital
Philadelphia
General practice
During the second year Dr. "Pain" snarls pharmacology or something at a
dazed class while W. Young melodramatically disproves everything that has
been previously revered as scientific. Here are unfolded such mysteries as "Vis
Medicatrix Naturae" and "What bridges the gap."
In his third year the student begins the systematic study of the "Materiar
Medicar." The lectures are embellished with tales of children who habitually
chew razor blades, of peroxide blonds who cry when nudged by a Mack truck
and of left-handed old gents who are frightened when they wake in the morning
with a rope around their necks. The student is permitted to guess how many
times the letter R appears in "Chammermillar" "Belladonnar" or "Cimmerci-
figer." This is supplemented by a series of talks on Turkish massage and the
persnickitiness of technicians, as conducted by the gum-chewing sage of South
Jersey. Following this the modest Dr. Benson lectures delightfully to the first
row on radium therapy. Dr. J. "Shadow" Frank conducts a weekly seance in a
properly darkened room in a tone of voice calculated to put fidgety ghosts at ease.
The fourth year of lectures by Dr. Boericke emphasize that all drugs were
probably first proven by Hahnemann and are pocket case remedies without which
one could not risk a trip to the corner cigar store. Clinical tips abound as to the
value of the sixth decimal trituration of the auro of the blue moose for curing
oboe players who find it difficult to urinate in the teeth of a strong north wind.
At the same time, by clinics, therapeutic conferences and ward work opportunity
is given the practical student to learn the finer points of auction bridge or
billiards.
Boger. Ellwood, "The Champion of the Forgotten Man," played football but
was called 'The Judge" because he was always on the bench. One
picture on a page at wholesale rates is his ambitch.
ROBERT BURGOYNE ROBERTSON
Cabool, Mo.
Ohio State University
Hahnemann Hospital
Missouri
Obstetrics
NICHOLAS JOHN ROCCO
1003 Wolf Street, Philadelphia, Pa.
Temple University
St. Agnes' Hospital, Philadelphia
Philadelphia
General practice
EDO JOSEPH SALVA
181 Main Street, Ridgefield Park, N. J.
New York University
Essex County Homeopathic Hospital, E. Orange,
N. J.
New Jersey
General practice
SURGERY
G. A. Van Lennep — our country gentleman.
John A. Brooke — president of the Amalgamated
Bridge Players.
Wayne T. Killian — the reverend.
Desiderio Roman — who really tries to teach surgery.
Herbert P. Leopold — the sun must be setting for his
shadow is so tall.
Jimmie Schofield — what a business.
Aubrey and Maxey — the fracture boys.
Tyler — "who's afraid of the big, bad wolf?"
Hen Ruth — "why don't you lock your car?"
Bill Martin — "it seems to me — "
Eddie Geckeler — "now if you fellows don't want to get
this stuff "
Frank Bristol — "intelligent first aid to the injured"
(catalog) .
"Carp" — a fleeting gesture and he is "off."
The course in surgery drags out for three years. The Laboratory and most
of the didactic teaching is suffered in the third year, that of the fourth being
entirely clinical.
Impressed as we were with our first views of surgery in a large city hospital,
and appreciative of the dramatics involved in many cases nevertheless, the
theatrics became very boring and attendance a gripe. A dry clinic at nine
Greer. Pugnacious Mel.
CHARLES FRANKLIN SAMPSEL
35 E. Coal Street, Shenandoah, Pa.
Rutgers University
Philadelphia General Hospital
Pennsylvania
General practice
RICHARD THOMAS SAUER
2628 Benninghofen Avenue, Hamilton, Ohio
Dennison University
Miami Valley Hospital, Dayton, Ohio
Kansas
Obstetrics and Gynecology
I
•*%lSfc
RAYMOND THEODORE SAXEN
104 New Brunswick Avenue, Hopelawn, Perth
Amboy, N. J.
Ohio State University
St. Barnabas' Hospital, Newark, N. J.
New Jersey
General practice
SURGE RY— Continued
and the operation of the case presented at eleven as done by Dr. Sylvis was
splendid, a pleasant relief from the usual presentation, where the student,
apparently, is nothing more than a disinterested spectator.
THIRD YEAR
Hernia. When you answered to the roll at nine — or else.
Fractures and Dislocations. Dr. Geckeler. Good stuff for those whose
zeal to get their money's worth (Balin and Beatty) caused them to stay until one
o'clock of a Saturday P.M. — or whose appreciation of things artistic (Babyock,
remember?) caused them no end of amazement when Edwin did unroll his
caricatures.
Operative Surgery. Drs. Martin and Carpenter. The boys worked hard,
even going to the extent of trying to cajole us with movies and supplying us
with "guts" (sheep's) on which to do some very elegant anastomosing.
Orthopedic Surgery. Dr. Brooke. " — now I have here just a few lantern
pictures." But, Doctor, the bell has already rung.
Anaesthesia. Dr. Killian per "Hen" Ruth — the latter practically naked
in his anaesthetizing attire — did lecture with a sly hint as to how good Mrs. Ruth's
little Henry really was.
Diseases of the Rectum. "A million dollars for finger cots."
FOURTH YEAR
No matter how the year is glorified in the catalog to us it means just
clinics.
Stayer and Stevens. Alike, experts on what to feed your babies. Unlike, their dispositions.
ERNEST SCERBO
671 Summit Avenue, Jersey City, N. J.
University of Alabama
Essex County Homeopathic Hospital, E. Orange,
N.J.
Jersey City, N. J.
Gynecology and Obstetrics
JOSEPH RANDALL SCHAEFFER
4206 N. 15th Street, Philadelphia, Pa.
St. Joseph's College
Philadelphia General Hospital
Philadelphia
General practice
ABRAHAM IRVING SCHWARTZ
416 N. 9th Street, Reading, Pa.
University of Pennsylvania
Reading Homeopathic Hospital
Pennsylvania
Obstetrics and Gynecology
UROLOGY
Leon T. "Fore" Ashcraft — incisionology and its com-
plications— an expert on the sliced mashie.
"P. G. H." Hunsicker — professor of political medi-
cine.
J. "See?" Kenworthy — the whistler and his sound.
"Pretty Boy" Campbell— a stroke ahead of Dr. Ash-
craft.
Weinstock — mainstay of the secondary defense.
THIRD YEAR
Dr. Ashcraft conducts the class through the G. U. tract, starting at the
penile meatus and ending in the midst of a caseous tubercle of the kidney, the
said kidney being subsequently removed at the Tuesday clinic, provided, of
course, that there is someone there to give the anesthesia and Damiani there to
prevent Dr. Ashcraft' s taking out both renal organs.
Clinic. Supremely awed were we, so that gushing blood means nothing
to us and a firm determination and high resolve to hold on to our particular
kidneys, poor things though they be.
Dispensary. Really good stuff and the social aspect, from the patient's
point of view, was amusing. Nothing homeopathic about the treatment here.
FOURTH YEAR
. . . "Now on my service at Philadelphia General ..."
Eastland. We have always wondered why Ted left a uniform and motorcycle to
study medicine. Eat, drink and make Mary for tomorrow you may
die, always Ted's philosophy.
Hoffa. Kirby's little boy.
CHARLES PLATTENBERGER SELL
1829 Tilghman Street, Allentown, Pa.
Muhlenberg College
Allentown General Hospital
Pennsylvania
Neurology
GEORGE J. SELSMAN
5402 Woodcrest Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa.
Villanova College
Women's Homeopathic Hospital, Philadelphia
Philadelphia
General practice
WILLIAM STEPHEN SERRI
938 State Street, Camden, N. J.
University of Pennsylvania
West Jersey Homeopathic Hospital, Camden,
N. J.
New York
Cardiology
LARYNGOLOGY, RHINOLOGY, OPHTHALMOLOGY
AND OTOLOGY
"Daddy" Weaver, homeopath.
F. O. Nagle, M. D.
"Bring 'em Back Alive" Smith
"Joe" V. F. Clay
"Cadaver" Marter
Charles "Ambi" Hollis, ambidextrist
"Tommy" Snyder, our friend
C. "Airplane" Haines
"Sonny" Weaver, allopath
At this point there is a glaring error in the catalog in that there is no
mention made of the lectures given during the second year. Who will ever forget
the twelve hours spent watching "Herr" Professor Hollis perform? We all
thought that if he were to hold chalk between his teeth he could really put on
a show. Then, for several hours, came a Dr. Haines, who presented a course in
personality and proved that if we sold ourselves to our patients we might some
day receive a parachute for Christmas. Who the hell wants a parachute?
THIRD YEAR
Laryngology and Rhinology (Anatomy). Lectures by Dr. Weaver left an
indelible impression of the indicated remedy. We were then introduced to "Cad"
Marter (short for cadaver), who began his two-years course in anatomy. His
demonstrations and personality left with us odors of formaldehyde and hydrogen
S. Katz. Sam Katz, of Katz and Katz, our class business man. The use of the same
perseverance in collecting bills as the Medic has seen will make him
a terror to his patients.
STANFORD P. T. SETO
Hanapepe, Kauai, Hawaii
University of Michigan
West Jersey Homeopathic Hospital, Camden,
N. J.
Hawaiian Islands
General practice
EZRA BERNARD SIROTTA
J.
931 Columbia Place, Atlantic City, N.
Franklin and Marshall College
West Jersey Homeopathic Hospital, Camden,
N. J.
New Jersey
General practice
JOSEPH GUY SMITH
112 N. 5th Street, Sunbury, Pa.
Bucknell University
Wyoming Valley Homeopathic Hospital, Wilkes-
Barre, Pa.
Sunbury, Pa.
Surgery
sulphide. Some day the doctor plans to take over the department of anatomy
and teach it for four solid years.
Ophthalmology. Drs. Fries and Snyder. A course in long names (compet-
ing with neurology and dermatology) but taught by two gentlemen who did
their best to keep us awake.
Otology. Dr. Clay. Buy a book and recite for ten days.
FOURTH YEAR
Dispensary Service (Anatomy) (N&T). The prerequisites for this course
are a sharp pencil, plenty of paper, tolerance of formaldehyde and a big sense
of humor. Our last contact with the great anatomist — thank heaven.
Dispensary Service — Ophthalmology. Dr. Weaver, Jr., proves himself to
be one of the boys.
Dispensary Service — Otology. Drs. Criswell and Haines. Again we look
in each other's ears but by this time the wax should be worn out from constant
practice.
GRADUATE COURSES
As we received but eighty hours of this important work during four
years (50% office practice), seventy hours of which were devoted to anatomy,
it is advisable to do graduate work. Consult the Dean who, before approval, will
see if you know the estimation of carbon dioxide in the air — you ought to with
eighty hours of the bunk as a sophomore.
Text Books. Gray's Anatomy, Cunningham's Anatomy, Piersol's Anatomy.
Cucinorta. "Kooch" comes from the South — South Philadelphia. He loves to ride
Tony but, personally, he just can't take it. "Kooch" will be a big shot
and we hope that some day he will show us how to amputate a can of
spaghetti with a stiletto.
SELTON SCOTT STEVENS
1619 Monsey Avenue, Scranton, Pa.
Lafayette College
Hahnemann Hospital, Scranton, Pa.
Scranton, Pa.
General practice
FREDERICK JOHN TATE
452 Allen Street, Allentown, Pa.
Muhlenberg College
Sacred Heart Hospital, Allentown, Pa.
Allentown, Pa.
Pediatrics
MAURICE TEPPER
5604 Woodbine Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa.
University of Pittsburgh
West Jersey Homeopathic Hospital, Camden,
N. J.
Philadelphia
General practice
to apply the forceps sans proper indications. The students also learned the
manner of performing intra-uterine somersaults and belly-flops, bringing out the
prize, feet first.
FOURTH YEAR
Obstetrical Conferences and Ward Work. Conferences — "Anything you
men want to ask about?" Ward work — lochia everywhere, colorful, descriptive,
smell it, feel it. Palpate a belly, take a blood pressure — thus was the time spent.
Labor Cases. A trial run at the bill of fare of Hahnemann Hospital. To be
called at 3 A. M. for a classic Caesarean and not to be called at 3 P. M. for a
normal delivery. To rush (via P. R. T.) to some laboring woman and to arrive
there in time to help the old man celebrate by drinking some of his Dago red.
Twelve normal deliveries are required by our sovereign State, witness these you
must and only under the most approved homeopathic conditions.
GYNECOLOGY
"King" Craig, the big boss
"Bunny-face" Frosch
"Bob" Hunter, "seven years before the mast"
C. F. "Cut-her-off"
SECOND YEAR
His nibs introduces us to Mackindrodt's ligament, movable fixation and
Cupid's catarrh.
THIRD YEAR
Gynecology. Dr. Craig and staff (Staff — Frosch). "Bunny-face" tore
through the endocrines. Later in the year the boss reviewed Mackindrodt's
ligament, movable fixation and Cupid's catarrh.
Saxen and Scerbo. Why, dammit, they're even getting to look alike.
WILLIAM C. THOROUGHGOOD
750 Bonsall Avenue, Sharon Hill, Pa.
Ursinus College
Hahnemann Hospital
Sharon Hill
General practice
WILLIAM ANTHONY TOMASCO
2140 S. Broad Street, Philadelphia, Pa.
Temple University
St. Agnes' Hospital, Philadelphia
Pennsylvania
General practice
FRANK TROPEA, JR.
2234 Earp Street, Philadelphia, Pa.
Villanova College
Hahnemann Hospital
Philadelphia
Internal Medicine
FOURTH YEAR
Hospital Instruction. Checkers, word games and hours of sleep in the
tropical atmosphere of the little clinic. Enough said.
Ward Work. Since when?
Pathology. Like a bad penny, always with us.
Dispensary. "A touch course in office practice" is among the few true
phrases found in our dear catalog. It forgot to mention the excellent course in
choice language by "Big Boy" Hunter and also, where were Craig, Frosch and
Kutteroff?
Erinakes. Our G-man — one of the good students who made the team.
Cullen. Esker actually had his shoes shined before dermatology. The "Portage
Flash" has never tasted the evils of nicotine or alcohol as his spare
time is devoted to preparing cases for Dr. Williams' clinics.
Reinish. Class of '36's gift to the 7th floor. Babies cry for him. Jimmie is one of
the enthusiastic apostles of young Jesus and you could move him like
a ton of dynamite by saying "Similia Similibus Curentur" in a 200x
whisper. His hobby is drawing a long bow.
Salva. Artist, student, diagnostician — a follower of the great Rufus Weaver —
one of those rare ones who could find a "Lash of Branches" and
"Millet Seed" where the rest of us only found chaos.
Magolda. Behold — our smiling Adonis from Villanova. Tony is as tempting as
a ripe apple. After July 1st the paroxysmal tachycardia will be very
apparent in the Nurses' Home.
Paris. The grand-daddy of them all — the old man of the mountain and the
old Salt Lake. His story is an epic of struggle, courage and selling books.
His path to glory was strewn with briers, thorns and agitation on the side.
Durante. ' 'Jimmy Bright Eyes "really went to town with a certain bald-headed pro-
fessor. Schnozzle can always be depended on for a good guestion,
and what guestions!
ALFRED TUTTLE
517 Kelby Street, Wilkinsburg, Pa.
Washington and Jefferson College
Pittsburgh Homeopathic Hospital
Pittsburgh
General practice
ANTHONY MICHAEL UNICE
75 Hillside Street, Wilkes-Barre, Pa.
St. Thomas College
Hahnemann Hospital, Scranton
California
Surgery
SAMUEL JOSEPH WISLER, 3rd
207 Forrest Avenue, Narberth, Pa.
Villanova College
Hahnemann Hospital
Narberth
General practice
Redl
er.
Dapper, smooth Irv — just like the old Jimmie Walker. When Irv de-
livered his masterpiece on routine Caesarean Section we knew we had
found the answer to obstetric problems. Although Irv is not one of
the 100% "Similia" boys, we know he'll knock 'em cold with M. S.
Capriotti. "Cap" knows the very best people. During the Freshman year we
associated him with white carnations. Early this year Epidermaphytosis
with secondary "Stoogification" overpowered him and was followed
by 1816 adhesions insuring his diploma.
Chiappetta. Jimmy knows the l,warp and woof" of medicine even as he does of
his tapestries. Has a passion for taking notes on the back of postage
stamps and helping brother anti-Ethiopians pass exams.
Elia. Whatever his glucose tolerance may be, Joe's disposition threshold is
low. Vied with" Cap" for one doctor's affection — but "Cap" had other
ties so Joe beat him by a beard's length.
Sampsel. Stretcher and tooth-pick juggler — Charley should impart excellent
lessons in growing to his diminutive patients by his stretching con-
tortions. Charley will be around on hand at P. G. H. if the Director of
Health gets in a jam.
>em.
Smiling, mustachioed Bill from the big "Soup and Beer Town" across
the river. If there's anything of a political nature stirring, Bill's sure to
have a finger, or, better still, an entire hand in it. Our nomination for
City Health Officer, Coroner and Photographer.
Schwartz. Bell, McCullom, Boyd and Sappington poured a lot into Pathology,
but there's little of it Schwartz thinks he's missed. Schwartzy was
our little "Sailor Boy" in the Frosh days but he now aspires to bigger
and better things.
Spiegel. After Charley got the Test Tube Baby problem settled he was able
to devote himself to more serious things, such as — the pursuit of the
rolling ivory in Herring Hall. Don't be surprised if Charley turns up
in a rocking chair of Homeopathy at Yale.
Sirotta. Before Gray revised his book he called in Sirotta as consultant on the
Perineal muscles — a boy who loved his chemistry so well that he went
on Joe Hepburn's High Kjehldahl and high Chandler Diet for a week.
CYRUS WILLIAM YEE
1641 Nauanu Avenue, Honolulu, Hawaii
University of Michigan
Sacred Heart Hospital, Allentown, Pa.
Hawaiian Islands
Surgery
EDWARD IOSEPH ZAMBORSKY
622 Cedar Street, Freeland, Pa.
Villanova College
Sacred Heart Hospital, Allentown, Pa.
Allentown
Pediatrics
BATTLIN' ZIONCHEQUE
Any General Hospital
Electoral College
Congress
Valhalla
Camerantics
Seto. What Sirotta doesn't know Seto knows, or thinks he does. He made a
serious bid for class kibitzer by his antics on the 6th floor. One of the
Michigan boys who expects to "cut his way" to fame in Hawaii.
Davis. Baron Von Donald. Our lone transfer (was the Dean's face red),
reversing the old adage, Donald became our homeopathic pillgram.
Jones. The Jones position, the A.M. at Fifteenth and Vine; the P.M. at Eigh-
teenth and Pine.
Hadley. Urologist, if we can take Dr. Ashcraft's word for it. Beer drinker, if you
want to take ours.
Balin. Remember the bout at the "Y"? — those books that bulge from every
pocket — "How dja joo, John?"
Tuttle. Narcoleptic — the Pittsburgh flash. We shall refrain from mentioning
a certain Social worker who brightened this dreamy existence and
caused little Alfred many a cross-country trek.
Smith. Pronounced Smith.
Smyth. Pronounced Smith.
La Taif. When Baccu, with furrowed brow, greets you, gently placing a pat-
ernal hand on your shoulder, you know he wants advice, a date, money
(35c), cigarettes, sympathy.
Sauer. "You with the smile on your face." Well dressed, well kept (tsk),
never ruffled.
Gaumer. Herr Herman returned from the continent the master of all French
idiots — we mean idioms — quel faux pas! Ellwood's boy should stick to
pig's knuckles and Sauer Brauten.
Julius Katz. Fire! Fire! Pass Katz down! No. 49 has kept us awake throughout
the past four dreary years despite the infectious lethargy of two
professors of the Photographic Art.
Beatty. "Who is Beatty? Where is he?" That all Professors seek him — seek him
Holy rare and scarce is he. Master Beatty personified the Colonel —
direct from the blue grass and Mint Julep state, he could not be ex-
pected to thrive well on 9 point zero zero punctuality.
THE UNDERGRADUATE SOCIETY
Donald A. Davis
Ralph P. Earle
William Ellis
Harry D. Evans, Jr.
Edward M. Glassburn
James E. Hadley
Charles H. Hodgkins, Jr.
John A. Hoffa
Howard S. Hudson
Donald J. Jones
William R. Kavanaugh
Kenneth T. Moore
Ernest N. Neber, Jr.
Frank J. Robertson, Jr., President
Six meetings of these modern followers of Hahnemann were held during
this, the society's third, year, at which time varying aspects of Homeopathy of
today were presented. The special speakers were the following popular physi-
cians: Drs. W. W. Young, Eugene Underhill, Jr., Calvin B. Knerr, Harry S.
Weaver, Sr.; William B. Griggs and Russell K. Mattern.
DR. BENSON'S GROUP
Robert E. Bierwirth
Robert N. Bowen
Charles W. Bruton
William J. Carey
A. Henry Clagett, Jr.
Charles H. Dow
Cedric E. Dunn
William Ellis
Harry Evans, Jr.
William R. Hazzard, Jr.
John A. Hoffa
William R. Kavanaugh
Kenneth T. Moore
Frank J. Robertson, Jr.
The above Seniors met Dr. Benson regularly throughout the year in his
characteristic informal conferences. Diagnosis and treatment of both malignant
and non-malignant tumors with emphasis on the roentgenologic and radiologic
therapy comprised the bulk of the material covered.
RALPH BERNSTEIN
DERMATOLOGICAL SOCIETY
Robert E. Bierwirth
Octavio A. Calabrese
Cedric E. Dunn
Ralph P. Earle
Herman E. Gaumer
William R. Hazzard, Jr.
Howard S. Hudson
Julius H. Katz
Donald J. Jones
Richard T. Sauer
The Ralph Bernstein Dermatological Society was organized on November
2, 1934, as a living tribute to Dr. Bernstein. Since that time it has functioned to
perpetuate and intensify the twofold program initiated by the Professor over
thirty years ago when he first became associated with the Hahnemann Medical
College and Hospital, namely: the development of sound Dermatologic reason-
ing, based upon a knowledge of fundamentals; and an appreciation of the
superiority of Homeopathic therapeutics in Dermatologic practice.
THE MEDIC STAFF
EDITOR SMYTH
" — a poor thing, mayhap, but mine own."
BUSINESS MAN KATZ
" — a good idea but we can't afford it."
W. WINCHELL CLAGETT
11 — no man is a hero to his own classmates."
DEDICATOR LA TAIF
" — the honor should seek the man, not the man the
honor."
BARRISTER BOWEN
Who defended our policy (three pictures to the page)
in open tribunal.
SELL
Whose attention to the photographic minutiae has
caused an added furrow in his already
troubled brow.
SNAP-SHOTTER SERRI
With his ever-present Kodak (adv.).
STAR-SALESMAN GAUMER
R. P. EARLE
Vinalhaven Visionary.
REINISH
Literally a man about the town.
HEIR-APPARENT HOFFA
COMRADE PINSKY
With classic references.
STATISTICIAN CAREY
With the dull task of gathering data.
No, this triumvirate does not represent the inexorable pro-
gression from the cradle to the grave but is, in truth, our faculty
advisory committee with its refining influence.
ACCOUCHEUR LAFFERTY
PEDIATRICIAN FISCHER
NECROLOGIST FISHER
Calabrese. St. James was one of the Boger boys — with a drag that passeth all
understanding.
Glassburn. Nudist "Sunny" — syphilologist — sartorial specimen — tonsorially
touchy -courts' custodian —our candidate for success.
Gomei. Whose Latin blood found an harmonious companion in one gentle-
man from Virginia.
Harasym. Baker— -Newmanite — politician — with the distinction of being the
first Ukrainian to receive an M.D. in these United States.
Pinsky. Argumentative — erudite — individual — a student of medicine and the
left wing. "Be not too flowery, Jacob."
Wisler. Work always fascinated Samuel the third — he could sit and look at it
for hours.
Kohut. "Nothing to it." — George's invariable answer when guestioned con-
cerning a guiz. He is either very smart or a swell liar.
Unice. Our hero — life-saver in the Sophomore year, snowbound this year.
The people's candidate for President. Tony started the day right for
Dr. Williams when he corroborated the good doctor's findings.
Tomasco. As host to Rocco, Bill has long since learned to stand on his own feet.
We know he will practice intelligently and, we hope, successfully.
Podell. For the night was made for music (sax?).
Narkiewicz. Pius Anthony — we wonder. "Aeguanimitas" — Narky's watch-word
as well as that of his illustrious Roman namesake.
Mainella. He of the Caesarean section. Dashing, dapper.
Thoroughgood. Literal and thorough — with pronunciations all his own.
Hodgkins. Can think of nothing but good about "Hodge" — what a helluva spot
for an editor!
Robertson, 3rd. The affluent prexy of many gangs — whose apparent savoir faire mis-
leads only a few.
Robertson, R. B. Our Horatio Alger — from orderly to interne — from interne to ?.
Thus wonder all of us.
Zamborsky. — "and the last shall be first," — "but when?" asks our bald-pated
end man.
UNDERCLASSES
JUNIOR CLASS
OFFICERS
PAUL K. GOOD President
FRANK S. ROZANSKI Vice-President
WILLIAM A. ANDERSON Secretary
THOMAS F. PUGH Treasurer
William Abramson, A.B., Penna.
Manuel Almes, Penna.
William A. Anderson, Penna.
James Arnao, Penna.
Jack W. Arnold, Ohio
Joseph F. Ascione, B.S., N. Y.
Myron H. Ball, Penna.
Bernard A. Balsis, Penna.
Wade F. Basinger, A.B., Ohio
James Bernardin, B.S., Penna.
Joseph F. L. Bilotta, Penna.
Paul L. Bradford, B.S., Penna.
Rubin R. Bresler, A.B., Penna.
Gerald C. Brignola, A.B., N. J.
Franklin S. Buzby, Penna.
Harry A. Carl, Penna.
Albert A. Carp, A.B., Penna.
Justin L. Cashman, B.S., Conn.
Durant K. Charleroy, B.S., 111.
Frank E. Cicchino, B.S., Penna.
Conrad K. Clippinger, Ohio
James J. Colavita, B.S., N. J.
Eduard H. Connor, Penna.
James E. Corrigan, A.B., N. Y.
Whitney C. Corsello, B.S., Penna.
Thomas D. Cosgrove, B.S., Penna.
John P. Cossa, Jr., Penna.
Philip L. Costa, B.S., N. J.
Louis P. Costanza, B.S., Penna.
William R. Cotton, A.B., N. Y.
Raymond B. Croissant, A.B., Mass.
Horace H. Custis, Jr., D. C.
John W. Dabbs, Miss.
Alfred S. Damiani, Penna.
Bryan A. Dawber, Penna.
William J. D'Elia, B.S., N. J.
Joseph J. Dougherty, Penna.
Richard E. Edmondson, W. Va.
Jerome S. Eisemann, N. J.
Howard G. Eisenberg, Penna.
Harry Ertel, B.S., Penna.
Anthony L. Esposito, B.S., N. Y.
Vasco A. Fanti, B.S., Penna.
David D. Fischer, A.B., N. J.
Robert I. Fleming, N. Y.
Francis P. Gallagher, B.S., Penna.
Pasguale J. C. Gambescia, Penna.
Orlando M. Ghigiarelli, B.S., Penna.
Andrew J. Giambrone, A.B., N. Y.
Francis F. Giannini, B.S., Penna.
Hamlet R. Giordano, Penna.
Samuel D. Glaus, B.S., N. J.
Paul K. Good, B.S., Penna.
Milton H. Graditor, Penna.
Joseph C. Grasberger, B.S., Penna.
Herbert P. Harkins, Penna.
Russell De W. Harris, N. J.
Charles G. Hill, A.B., N. J.
James B. Homan, Del.
William J. Hornyak, N. J.
David F. Hottenstein, Penna.
Louis A. Hyman, B.S., N. Y.
Allison E. Imler, B.S., Penna.
Michael G. Ioup, B.S., Penna.
Carl Otto Keck, Penna.
Maximilian L. J. Konieczka, Penna.
Walter H. Lambert, Penna.
Kenneth K. C. Lau, Hawaii
Russell A. Lobb, A.B., Conn.
Salvatore L. Lombardi, A.B., Penna.
Noah K. Mack, A.B., Penna.
Philip J. MacLaren, B.S., N. Y.
Mario F. Mantia, Penna.
Frederick E. Marino, B.S., Ph.G., Penna.
Frank J. Martorella, B.S., N. Y.
Christopher J. McLoughlin, A.B., Penna.
Thomas A. McMahon, Jr., B.S., N. Y.
Collum A. Miles, Penna.
John Morrocco, Ohio
Herman C. Mosch, B.S., Penna.
Americo J. Muzi, A.B., Penna.
Matthew A. Navitsky, Penna.
Watson E. Neiman, N. Y.
Thomas W. Nichols, Jr., B.S., Penna.
Sydney S. Norwick, B.S., Penna.
Charles W. Ohl, Penna.
Paul F. Overs, Ohio
Frederick A. Parsons, Penna.
William B. Patterson, Penna.
Alexander E. Pearce, Penna.
Carmine L. Pecora, N. J.
John W. Pratt, Penna.
Arthur L. Price, A.B., N. Y.
Thomas F. Pugh, Penna.
Robert H. Reddick, N. Y.
William A. Reishtein, Penna.
Emil E. Reiss, Jr., Penna.
Charles Reiter, N. Y.
Mark G. Risser, Penna.
Charles H. Robinson, Ohio
Frank S. Rozanski, Penna.
Herschel J. Rubin, Penna.
Karl S. Russell, N. J.
Jack Savran, R. I.
Charles S. Sherman, B.S., N. J.
John F. Shevlin, B.S., Penna.
Mario S. Sindaco, Penna.
C. Stuart Smith, Penna.
Hamilton M. Smith, Penna.
Joseph H. Smith, Jr., Penna.
Alphonse C. Smuda, B.S., Penna.
Christian L. R. Souder, Penna.
George Spota, B.S., N. Y.
Pasquale A. Statile, B.S., N. J.
Arthur J. Stein, Penna.
Thomas E. Timney, Penna.
George P. Tsorvas, W. Va.
Milton Unger, B.S., N. J.
Frank A. Vallario, B.S., N. J.
Herman V. Walker, Del.
Merritt R. White, Penna.
Harold N. Yoh, B.S., Penna.
SOPHOMOR E C LASS
OFFICERS
JAMES R. EYNON President
JOSEPH BITMAN Vice-President
WILSON D. TUCKER Secretary
GEORGE P. DESJARDINS Treasurer
Ercole A. Addonizio, B.S., Mass.
Peter M. Agnone, Penna.
Chester H. Albright, Jr., B.S., Penna.
Anthony J. Balsamo, N. Y.
Joseph D. Barbella, A.B., N. J.
Harry W. Bashline, Penna.
Norman E. Basinger, A.B., Ohio
Clarence E. Baxter, Ohio
Dominic A. Bianchi, N. Y.
Frank K. Bird, N. Y.
Ralph I. Bishow, A.B., Louisiana
Joseph Bitman, Penna.
James R. Bone, Ohio
Dennis J. Bonner, Jr., Penna.
William L. Bonnet, B.S., N. J.
Hugh L. Bowman, B.S., N. Y.
Carmel J. Bozzi, B.S., Penna.
John T. Brittingham, Penna.
Samuel Burtoff, Penna.
Richard A. Caldwell, B.S., Penna.
Michael A. Cambest, Jr., B.S., Penna.
Michael T. Cappola, Jr., B.S., Penna.
Charles A. Carabello, Penna.
William A. Carero, N. Y.
Americo V. Casella, B.S., Ga.
Alfred J. Catenacci, Penna.
Edwin L. Ciccone, A.B., N. Y.
Joseph E. Cooper, Penna.
Frederick T. Cope, Penna.
Pasquale Dante, N. J.
Edward F. Delagi, B.S., N. Y.
George V. Derickson, B.S., Penna.
George P. Desjardins, A.B., Me.
Leo V. Di Cara, A.B., N. Y.
Anthony J. Di Fabio, B.S., N. Y.
Samuel Dinenberg, A.B., Penna.
Grimaldo C. Di Stefano, Penna.
Andrew A. Doering, Penna.
John T. Dougherty, Del.
Ernest Z. Eperjessy, Penna.
James R. Eynon, N. J.
Paul G. Fago, B.S., Penna.
Philip J. Ferry, B.S., Penna.
Frederick F. Fiedler, B.S., Penna.
John K. K. Finley, Penna.
Nicholas G. Frignito, A.B., Penna.
Willis A. Fromhold, Ind.
Norman W. Garwood, N. J.
Louis J. Gatto, N. Y.
Bernard M. Gilbert, A.B., Penna.
Harold F. Gilbert, N. J.
John H. Gindhart, N. J.
Vincent W. Giudice, Penna.
Albert H. Gleason, B.S., N. Y.
Henry J. Gowaty, Penna.
Jack B. Green, Penna.
John G. Grego, Penna.
Daniel D. Grove, B.S., Penna.
Francis P. Grzedzinski, Penna.
Burton A. Hall, Penna.
Lester A. Halley, Ohio
Nicholas F. Hoffman, Jr., Penna.
Harold E. Houck, B.S., Penna.
Michael G. Hresan, Penna.
John R. Hubbard, Kansas
Harold F. Hughes, N. J.
Thomas E. Hughes, Jr., N. J.
Charles K. Ives, A.B., N. Y.
Walter S. Kaminski, Penna.
Furman T. Kepler, B.S., Penna.
William G. Kirkland, Penna.
Carl H. Kline, Penna.
George M. Klitch, B.S., Penna.
Martin R. Krausz, Jr., B.S., Penna.
Salvatore A. Lawrence, B.S., Penna.
Robert G. Lehman, Penna.
Bernard Leibowitz, A.B., Del.
Leo A. Levine, B.S., Penna.
Ralph H. Leyrer, Ohio
William Likoff, A.B., Penna.
Frank Lima, B.S., N. Y.
Russell I. London, Penna.
John R. Lutz, Penna.
Albert E. Magson, Penna.
Ralph W. Maio, Penna.
Milton Manette, B.S., N. J.
R. Gilbert Mannino, Penna.
Robert B. Marin, N. Y.
Robert J. McLaughlin, A.B., Penna.
Eugene G. Mellies, Mo.
Nicholas R. Menna, Penna.
Wilfrid J. A. Millet, Mass.
Marlin C. Moore, Penna.
Alexander J. Mozzer, B.S., Conn.
Edward W. Mulligan, N. J.
George J. Nichols, B.S., Penna.
George A. Nitshe, N. J.
John R. Noon, Jr., Penna.
Daniel J. O'Connell, Jr., B.S., Penna.
George S. Pettis, A.B., Penna.
Edmund S. Piszczek, Penna.
Ermin D. J. Pompizzi, Jr., Penna.
Daniel A. Porreca, B.S., Penna.
James D. Purvis, B.S., Penna.
Julius J. Renger, Penna.
Lewis J. Restak, A.B., Penna.
Alan N. Rogers, B.S., Penna.
Jack J. Rommer, Penna.
Theodore R. Sadock, A.B., Penna.
Sidney N. Zubrow,
George Sahlaney, Penna.
William L. Salaky, A.B., N. J.
John J. Sassaman, Penna.
Harold P. Shapiro, B.S., N. J.
Maurice Sherman, B.S., Penna.
Raymond J. Shettel, Jr., B.S., Penna.
Joel Shrager, Penna.
Morris S. Shuman, B.S., Penna.
Anthony Shupis, Jr., Conn.
Bernard Siegel, Penna.
Alfons J. Sierocki, Penna.
J. Winslow Smith, Penna.
Elmo B. Sommers, B.S., Penna.
Peter L. Steffa, Penna.
Leland M. Stetser, N. J.
John C. Sutton, Jr., B.S., Penna.
John A. Tamarelli, Penna.
Patrick L. Tighe, Jr., Penna.
Francis S. Tolodziecki, Penna.
Martin Tolomeo, B.S., N. J.
Ethan L. Trexler, B.S., Penna.
James F. V. Trombino, A.B., Penna.
Wilson D. Tucker, Penna.
William J. Vanston, Jr., B.S., Penna.
Malcolm E. Walker, N. Y.
David H. West, N. J.
John C. Whitaker, A.B., Penna.
Benjamin A. Wiech, N. Y.
Albert J. Zimmerman, A.B., Penna.
Penna.
FR E S HMAN C LASS
OFFICERS
J. V. F. CLAY, JR President
NICHOLAS A. CANUSO Vice-President
MICHAEL A. COLELLA Secretary
E. P. SACKS-WILNER Treasurer
Edward R. Aberant, B.S., Penna.
Raul R. Acosta, B.S., Puerto Rico
John C. Allen. Ph.B., Conn.
John J. Androski, B.S., Penna.
William F. Basinger, Ohio
Louis Bender, Ph.B., N. J.
Kenneth W. Benjamin, Penna.
George H. Benzon, III, Penna.
Edmund J. Biancarelli, A.B., Penna.
Donald L. Bice, Del.
William B. Blaisdell, Jr., Me.
Richard J. Bonacci, Penna.
William C. Bown, Penna.
Solon R. Boynton, Jr., Wash.
John M. Brady, Penna.
Frank E. Bristol, Jr., Penna.
George C. Brong, B.S., Penna.
Henry W. Brown, Jr., B.A., Ohio
George F. Browne, B.S., Penna.
William V. Bruton, Penna.
Samuel E. Burkhart, B.S., Penna.
Herman Bush, B.S., Penna.
Martin L. Caine, Jr., B.S., Conn.
Alphonse L. Cantelmo, A.B., N. J.
Nicholas A. Canuso, Penna.
Sylvester A. Capalbo, B.S., R. I.
Dale L. Carlberg, B.S., Penna.
Franklin K. Cassel, B.S., Penna.
Ralph D. J. Cavalli, B.S., Del.
Mario A. Cinquino, Penna.
Joseph V. F. Clay, Jr., Penna.
James F. Clinton, Jr., Conn.
Michael A. Colella, A.B., N. Y.
Lawrence P. Conway, B.S., R. I.
Glenwood L. Cook, Jr., Ga.
George F. Creamer, R. I.
Anthony D. D'Alfonso, B.S., Penna.
Stephen J. Deichelmann, Pa.
George D. Deradorian, B.S., N. Y.
Stephen Derkach, Jr., Ph.G., Penna.
Louis M. Diemer, Jr., B.A., Penna.
Roger W. Dixon, B.S., Penna.
Roberts K. Dodd, Penna.
Warren McC. Duderstadt, Penna.
Milton Fabricant, B.A., Md.
Abe L. Feuer, B.S., Conn.
Nicholas F. Fiegoli, B.S., N. Y.
Anthony R. Fittante, A.B., N. Y.
Alfred F. Flora, B.S., Penna.
Frank J. Fragala, B.S., Penna.
Thomas J. Fritchey, B.S., M.A., N. Y.
Robert J. Gallagher, Penna.
Peter Gatti, B.A., N. Y.
Robert J. Gilardi, Penna.
Richard P. Giliberty, B.S., N. Y.
Chester J. Ginieczki, B.S., Penna.
James C. Giuffre, A.B., Penna.
Richard B. Gleason, Penna.
Morris M. Gratz, A.B., Penna.
Martin F. Hayes, A.B., Penna.
Glenn D. Heckler, Penna.
Aaron H. Heisey, Penna.
David R. Hess, B.S., Va.
George H. Hoerner, B.S., Penna.
Arthur J. Hughes, N. J.
Earl R. Ikeler, D.D.S., Penna.
George L. Irwin, Penna.
William L. Janus, Jr., A.B., N. J.
John J. Kalamarides, A.B., N. Y.
Edward Kavjian, Penna.
Herman Kessler, B.S., M.A., Penna.
Lewis H. Kirchhofer, A.B., Penna.
Herbert G. Kleinguenther, Penna.
William F. G. Kleuber, Penna.
Martin J. Koebert, B.S., Penna.
Carroll S. Kring, Penna.
Harold A. Krohn, B.S., Penna.
Irvin W. Kross, 111.
Peter G. Kutra, B.S., Penna.
Thomas J. Latoff, Penna.
Samuel M. Levit, A.B., Penna.
Edgar F. Lillicrapp, B.S., M.S., Penna.
Armand S. Lincourt, B.S., Mass.
Benjamin N. Litman, B.S., Penna.
George F. Loeslein, Penna.
Salem H. Lumish, B.A., Penna.
James J. Lynch, B.S., Penna.
Risley J. Madrechesia, N. J.
Joseph P. Mallo, N. Y.
Victor J. Margotta, Penna.
Francis M. Matyjasik, A.B., N. J.
Clifton A. McClain, Jr., Penna.
Llewellyn A. J. McGovern, B.S., R. I.
James J. McKeon, B.S., Conn.
Edwin D. Merrill, N. J.
Reginald C. Miller, N. J.
Jacob J. Mooradian, Mass.
John F. Moran, Jr., B.S., N. J.
Ralph E. Morgan, N. J.
William H. Morrison, B.S., 111.
Vito J. Murgolo, A.B., N. Y.
John C. Myer, N. J.
Martin J. Nichols, B.S., Penna.
Maxwell Ocheltree, Jr., B.S., Penna.
Vincent C. Olshevsky, Penna.
Roger W. O'Neil, B.S., N. H.
Howard B. Pastor, Penna.
Wallace J. Pianka, B.S., R. I.
Theodore W. Piekielniak, A.B., N. Y.
Nicholas P. Popov, Cal.
George E. Potter, Jr., A.B., Del.
William D. Prescott, Penna.
John P. Primiano, Penna.
Stanley Pupek, Jr., Penna.
Dale A. Rice, Penna.
John D. Rocco, B.S., N. J.
Samuel Z. Rose, A.B., Penna.
Milton K. Rosen, A.B., Penna.
Maurice V. E. Ross, Penna.
Martin M. Rothstein, Penna.
John L. Russ, Jr., B.S., Penna.
Erv/in P. Sacks-Wilner, B.A., N. J.
Hyde G. Sample, Jr., Penna.
Charles A. Saseen, B.S., N. J.
Francis A. Sayers, Penna.
Vincent Schettini, N. J.
John T. Schofield, Jr., Penna.
Ralph I. Schwalm, Penna.
Harry J. Schwartz, B.S., Penna.
Vincent A. Scialli, B.S., N. J.
Mario J. Serena, A.B., Conn.
Frank H. Zappacosta,
Herbert P. W. Seto, B.S., Hawaii
Norman M. Shapiro, A.B., Penna.
William J. Sigmund, Penna.
Sidney T. Simon, B.A., Penna.
Alfred H. Smith, Jr., B.S., N. Y.
Ramon J. Spritzler, B.S., Penna.
Louis J. Staskiel, Jr., Penna.
Edgar I. Steinberg, A.B., Penna.
Sygmund J. J. Telerski, A.B., Penna.
Nicholas P. Teresi, N. Y.
William A. Tosick, B.S., Del.
Thomas W. Tucker, A.B., Ohio
Louis Ulin, A.B., Penna.
Nicholas J. Vitullo, Jr., B.S., Penna.
John M. Vlasic, Penna.
Donald J. Volpe, A.B., N. J.
Sydney Waldman, A.B., Penna.
Le Roy L. Walker, Jr., Penna.
John A. Walsh, B.S., Penna.
George S. K. Warner, Penna.
Abraham Weinberg, B.S., N. Y.
Sidney U. Wenger, B.S., Penna.
Edward C. Whalen, N. J.
William W. Wheeler, Penna.
Wilbur H. Wire, Jr., B.S., Penna.
Norman H. Witt, B.S., N. Y.
William W. Wolf, A.B., Wis.
Henry L. Worley, B.S., Md.
Casimir W. Yakulis, Jr., Penna.
Penna.
"INFORMER" KRATZ
CLARA
— with feminine flutterings
"POP" SLOCUM
— from chemistry to
commencement
"SIMON LEGREE" TURNER
— to pay a fine was a pleasure
"MENDIE"
— who judges a book by its cover
ORGANIZATIONS
ALPHA SIGMA
OFFICERS
President Frank John Robertson, Jr.
Vice-President Herbert Perrin Harkins
Secretary Frederick Adam Parsons
Treasurer Charles Henry Hodgkins, Jr.
Garth W. Boericke, M.D.
Lester Leroy Bower, M.D.
Edward W. Campbell, M.D.,
F.A.C.S
Joseph V. F. Clay, M.D., F.A.C.S.
Leon Clemmer, M.D., F.A.C.S.
James H. Closson, 3rd, M.D.
Earl B. Craig, M.D., F.A.C.S.
Pasquale G. Damiani, M.D.
Thomas L. Doyle, M.D.
Harry D. Evans, M.D.
Donald R. Ferguson, M.D.,
F.A.C.P.
Gerald A. Fincke, M.D.
H. Russell Fisher, M.D.
Edwin O. Geckeler, M.D.
George D. Geckeler, M.D.
FRATRES IN FACULTATE
James M. Godfrey, M.D.
Carroll F. Haines, M.D.
Edmund G. Hessert, M.D.
N. Fulmer Hoffman, M.D.
Charles B. Hollis, M.D., F.A.C.S.
Donald T. Jones, M.D.
F. Laird Kennedy, M.D.
Wayne T. Killian, M.D.
Richard W. Larer, M.D.
Russell S. Magee, M.D.
Russell K. Mattern, M.D.
Carroll R. McClure, M.D.
Joseph McEldowney, M.D.
Frank O. Nagle, A.M., M.D.
George R. Neff, M.D.
Newlin F. Paxson, M.D., F.A.C.S.
Fred C. Peters, M.D.
John H. Reading, Jr., M.D.
Charles L. W. Riegar, M.D.
Henry S. Ruth, M.D.
C. Dudley Saul, M.D.
James D. Schofield, M.D.
Fred W. Smith, M.D., F.A.C.S.
E. Roland Snader, M.D., F.A.C.P.
H. Earle Twining, M.D.
Everett A. Tyler, Ph.B., M.D.
Edward P. Van Tine, M.D.
Thomas J. Vischer, M.D.
Harry S. Weaver, M.D., F.A.C.S.
Harry S. Weaver, Jr., M.D.
Aubrey B.Webster, M.D., F.A.C.S.
William W. Young, M.D.
FRATRES IN COLLEGIO
Tausbee Beckham Beatty
Charles William Bruton
Cedric Errol Dunn
1936
Harry Davidson Evans, Jr.
Herman Elmer Gaumer
Melvin Albert Greer
Charles Henry Hodgkins, Jr.
Robert Addison Marquis
Frank John Robertson, Jr.
ALPHA SIGMA
First Row — Greer, Evans, Harkins, Hodgkins, Gaumer, Bruton, Marquis, Beatty
Second Row — Duderstadt, Smith, Reiss, Finley, Hoffman, Hayes, Krausz, Burkhart
Third Row — Clay, Price, Bashline, Carlberg, Nichols, Walker, Caldwell, Bruton
Fourth Row- -Sample, Wolf, Gleason, McClain, Albright, Hughes
William Arthur Anderson
Horace Hatch Custis, Jr.
Herbert Perrin Harkins
Frederick Adam Parsons
Chester Harrison Albright, Jr.
Harry Woodrow Bashline
Richard Alden Caldwell
Frederick Trevor Cope
William Vincent Bruton
Samuel Ellsworth Burkhart
Joseph Valentine Francis Clay, Jr.
Warren McCleary Duderstadt
1937
William Bruce Patterson
John Wesley Pratt
Arthur Lester Price
E. Edward Reiss, Jr.
1938
John Kent Kane Finley
Jack Benjamin Green
Nicholas Fulmer Hoffman, Jr.
John Russell Hubbard
1939
Richard Burke Gleason
Martin Francis Hayes
Arthur Joseph Hughes
Clifton Andrew McClain, Jr.
John Francis Shevlin
Joseph Hunter Smith, Jr.
Merritt Robert White
Thomas Edward Hughes, Jr.
Martin Richard Krausz, Jr.
George John Nichols
Maxwell Ocheltree, Jr.
Hyde Glenn Sample, Jr.
LeRoy Lawrence Walker, Jr.
William Walter Wolf.
PLEDGES
Dale Levan Carlberg
PHI ALPHA GAMMA
OFFICERS
President John A. Hoffa
Vice-President John E. Barrett
Treasurer Kenneth T. Moore
Secretary Paul K. Good
Editor Paul L. Bradford
Alumni Adviser Henry D. Lafferty, M.D.
FRATRES IN FACULTATE
O. F. Barthmaier, M.D.
Michael J. Bennett, M.D.
J. Antrim Crellin, M.D.
Henry L. Crowther, M.D.
Carl C. Fischer, M.D.
H. Franklin Flanagan, M.D.
Charles J. V. Fries, M.D.
Frank S. Frosch, M.D.
Richard R. Gates, M.D.
Russell D. Geary, M.D.
Theodore C. Geary, M.D.
J. Rawlins Ginther, M.D.
Warren S. Hoenstine, M.D.
John E. James, M.D., F.A.C.P.
J. Miller Kenworthy, M.D.
Paul N. Kistler, M.D.
William K. Kistler, M.D.
Henry D. Lafferty, M.D.
Lowell L. Lane, M.D., F.A.C.P.
John H. McCutcheon, M.D.
R. J. McNeil, M.D.
Bruce V. MacFadyen, M.D.
Harry B. Mark, M.D.
Wm. L. Martin, M.D.
Albert Mutch, M.D.
David D. Northrop, M.D.
Richard Northrop, M.D.
Desiderio A. Roman, M.D.
Robert F. Roth, M.D.
Samuel W. Sappington, M.D.,
F.A.C.P.
James Seligman, M.D.
Alfred R. Seraphin, M.D.
Clarence L. Shollenberger, M.D.
Walter J. Snyder, M.D.
Edward A. Steinhilber, M.D.
Wm. M. Sylvis, M.D., F.A.C.S.
FRATRES IN COLLEGIO
1936
John Eugene Barrett
A. Henry Clagett, Jr.
William Robinson Hazzard, Jr.
John Albert Hoffa
Donald Jack Jones
Kenneth T. Moore
Ernest N. Neber, Jr.
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PHI ALPHA GAMMA
First Row — Neber, Hazzard, Barrett, Hoffa, Moore, Jones, Clagett
Second Row — Benzon, Mosch, Reddick, Corrigan, Hornyak, Tolomeo, Ross, Basinger, Kirchhofer
Third Row — Homan, Bradford, Eynon, Hoerner, Cashman, Millet, Kirkland, Good, Benjamin, Trexler, Leyrer
Paul Leiby Bradford
Wade Francis Basinger
Justin Laurence Cashman
James Edward Corrigan
1937
Paul Kutz Good
James B. Homan
William Joseph Hornyak
Herman Carl Mosch
Robert Henry Reddick
Karl Stephen Russell
C. Stuart Smith
James Rich Eynon
Harold Franklin Hughes
William George Kirkland
1938
Ralph Henry Leyrer
Wilfrid J. A. Millet
John Chalmers Sutton, Jr.
Martin Tolomeo
Ethan L. Trexler
John Charles Whitaker
William Fraser Basinger
Kenneth Wells Benjamin
1939
George H. Benzon, 3rd
George H. Hoerner
Lewis H. Kirchhofer
Maurice V. E. Ross
William C. Bown
PLEDGES
Earl Raymond Ikeler
Alfred H. Smith, Jr.
PI UPSILON RHO
OFFICERS
President Howard S. Hudson
Vice-President Joseph Guy Smith
Recording Secretary Charles Wallis Ohl
Corresponding Secretary Bryan A. Dawber
Treasurer Charles S. Sherman
John V. Allen, M.D.
Leon T. Ashcraft, A.M., M.D.,
F.A.C.S.
W. Franklin Baker, A.M., M.D.
Frank C. Benson, Jr., M.D.,
F.A.C.S.
Ralph Bernstein, M.D., F.A.C.P.
James B. Bert, M.D.
Henry G. Blessing, M.D.
John A. Borneman, P.D.
Howard S. Busier, M.D., F.A.C.S.
Eugene F. Carpenter, Jr., M.D.
Joseph R. Criswell, M.D.
Hunter S. Cook, B.S., M.D.
Everett H. Dickinson, M.D.,
F.A.C.S.
Harry M. Eberhard, M.D.
Grant O. Favorite, B.S., M.D.,
F.A.C.P.
T. W. Frank, M.D.
Melville A. Goldsmith, B.S., M.D.
Nathan Griffith, L.L.B.
FRATRES IN FACULTATE
William B. Griggs, M.D.
Joseph S. Hepburn, B.S., M.S.,
Ph.D., M.D.
Robert A. Hibbs, M.D.
Harry F. Hoffman, M.D.
J. Arthur Horneff, B.S., M.D.
Robert M. Hunter, M.D.
Francis M. James, M.D.
W. E. Kepler, B.S., M.D.
Dunne W. Kirby, B.S., M.D.,
F.A.C.P.
Jules J. Klain, M.D.
Henry I. Klopp, M.D., Sc.D.,
F.A.C.P.
Alfred E. Krick, M.D.
Charles F. Kutteroff, Ph.G, M.D.
Harry P. Landis, Jr., M.D.
Charles E. Lawson, B.S., M.D.
George Lorenz, Jr., B.S., M.D.
Karl F. Mayer, M.D.
Warren C. Mercer, M.D., F.A.C.S.
Paul A. Metzger, M.D.
Michael F. Ondovchak, M.D.
Gilbert J. Palen, A.B., M.D.,
F.A.C.S.
Eugene F. Payne, A.B., A.M., M.D.
Thomas W. Phillips, M.D.
Albert R. Rihl, Jr., M.D.
George J. Rilling, B.S., M.D.
Desiderio Roman, A.M., M.D.,
F.A.C.S.
William G. Schmidt, Ph.G., Ph.D.,
L.L.B., L.L.M., M.P.L.
Henry L. Somers, M.D.
L. Thomas Sooy, B.S., M.D.
Thomas M. Snyder, M.D.
Leander P. Tori, M.D.
Gustav A. Van Lennep, M.D.,
F.A.C.S.
G. Harlan Wells, B.S., M.D., Sc.D.,
F.A.C.P.
Charles J. White, M.D.
Frank H. Widman, M.D.
Paul O. Wittman, M.D.
Howard Sampson Hudson
FRATRES IN COLLEGIO
1936
Richard Thomas Sauer
Joseph Guy Smith
PI UPSILON RHO
First Row — Dabbs, Dawber, Ohl, Hudson, Smith, Purvis, Cambest
Second Row — Charleroy, Kavjian, Glaus, MacLaren, Mozzer, Gowaty, Pompizzi. Cooper, Garwood
Third Row — Russ, Worley, McLaughlin, Margotta, Houck, Desjardins, Kutra, McKeon, Keck
Fourth Row — Doering, Yakulis, Gindhart, Ives, Mellies, Cantelmo, Gleason
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Durant Kost Charleroy
John Wideman Dabbs
Bryan A. Dawber
1937
Samuel D. Glaus
Carl O. Keck
Philip J. MacLaren
Charles W. Ohl
Charles S. Sherman
Frank Kenneth Bird
William Laurence Bonnet
Michael Albert Cambest, Jr.
Joseph Eugene Cooper
George Pierre Desjardins
Andrew Alan Doering
1938
Norman William Garwood
John Henry Gindhart
Albert Harvey Gleason
Henry Jacob Gowaty
Harold Emerson Houck
Charles Keator Ives
Eugene George Mellies
Alexander John Mozzer
Erwin D. J. Pompizzi, Jr.
James David Purvis
Alan Newton Rogers
Elmo Bauer Sommers
A. Lawrence Cantelmo
Robert J. Gilardi
Peter G. Kutra
1939
V. John Murgolo
Harry J. Schwartz
Henry Lee Worley
C. W. Yakulis, Jr.
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PHI LAMBDA KAPPA
First Row — Eisenberg, Balin, Sirotta, Reishtein, Pinsky, Spiegel, Almes
Second Row — Dinenberg, Burtoff, Bishow, Abramson, Litman, Norwick, Kessler
Third Row — Gratz, Rose, Zimmerman, Hyman, Levit
Joseph A. Balin
Harry Eisenberg
PHI LAMBDA KAPPA
1936
Harry A. Pinsky
Ezra B. Sirotta
Charles M. Spiegel
William Abramson
Manuel Almes
1937
Louis A. Hyman
Sydney S. Norwick
William A. Reishtein
Ralph I. Bishow
Samuel Burtoff
1938
Samuel Dinenberg
Bernard Leibowitz
Albert J. Zimmerman
Morris M. Gratz
Herman Kessler
1939
Samuel Levit
Benjamin N. Litman
Samuel Z. Rose
Norman M. Shapiro
Sydney Waldman
IL CIRCOLO ITALIANO
First Row — Gambescia, Ciavarelli, Monaco, Tropea, Mainella, Tomasco, Cucinotta
Second Row — Bonacci, Canuso, Lombardi, Murgolo, Marino, Cantelmo, Morrocco, Frignito
Third Row — Carabello, Catenacci, Giordano, Arnao, Cappola, Steffa, Pompizzi
IL CIRCOLO ITALIANO
OFFICERS
President Frank Tropea, Jr.
Vice-President Saverio A. Monaco
Secretary P. J. C. Gambescia
Treasurer H. Richard Giordano
Counsellor Peter L. Steffa
1936
Anthony Ciavarelli . Frank S. Mainella William Tomasco
Salvatore Cucinotta Saverio A. Monaco Frank Tropea, Jr.
1937
James Arnao H. Richard Giordano Frederick E. Marino
P. J. C. Gambescia Salvatore L. Lombardi John Morrocco
1938
Michael T. Cappola, Jr. Grimaldo C. Di Stefano Ermin Pompizzi, Jr.
Charles A. Carabello Nicholas G. Frignito Daniel A. Porreca
Alfred J. Catenacci Peter L. Steffa
1939
Richard J. Bonacci Nicholas A. Canuso Alfred Cinquino
Alphonse L. Cantelmo Vito J. Murgolo
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PHI DELTA EPSILON
First Row -Bresler, S. Katz, Fridrich, Ball, Podell, J. Katz, Tepper
Second Row — London, Sherman, Shuman, Manette, Lumish, Wenger, Sacks-Wilner
Third Row — Bitman, Rothstein, Likoff, Rubin, Graditor, Ulin
Fourth Row — Siegel, Krohn, Weinberg, Carp, Fabricant, Rosen
PHI DELTA EPSILON
Harry E. Fridrich
J. Harry Katz
1936
Samuel Katz
Morris J. Podell
Maurice Tepper
Myron H. Ball
Rubin R. Bresler
1937
Albert A. Carp
Milton H. Graditor
Herschel J. Rubin
Joseph Bitman
William Likoff
1938
Russell I. London
Milton Manette
Maurice Sherman
Morris S. Shuman
Bernard Siegel
Milton Fabricant
Harold A. Krohn
Salem H. Lumish
1939
Milton K. Rosen
Martin M. Rothstein
E. P. Sacks-Wilner
Louis Ulin
Abraham Weinberg
Sidney U. Wenger
NEWMAN CLUB
First Row — Tomasco, DiGiacomo, Colavita, Schaeffer, Harasym, Balsis, Carey, Massey, Cucinotta
Second Row — Lombardi, Magolda, Ginieczki, Fragala, Smuda, Mallo, Clay, Walsh, Popov, Sigmund
Third Row — Madrechesia, Clinton, Gallagher, Acosta, Konieczka, Bonacci, Schettini, Telerski, Fittante
Fourth Row— Primiano, Pianka, Linton, Dougherty, Gallagher, Kleuber, Sayers, Capalbo, Gleason, Hughes, Pecora
NEWMAN CLUB
OFFICERS
President Emil L. Harasym
Vice-President Joseph R. Schaeffer
Treasurer John J. Sassaman
Secretary Bernard A. Balsis
1936
William J. Carey Emil L. Harasym Daniel M. Massey
Salvatore Cucinotta Anthony F. Magolda Joseph R. Schaeffer
Alfred M. DiGiacomo William A. Tomasco
1937
Bernard A. Balsis Vasco A. Fanti Salvatore L. Lombardi
Joseph F. L. Bilotta Francis P. Gallagher Carmine L. Pecora
James J. Colavita William J. Hornyak Frank S. Rozanski
Joseph J. Dougherty Maximilian L. J. Konieczka Alphonse C. Smuda
Joseph F. Cooper
George P. Desjardins
Henry J. Gowaty
Edward R. Aberant
Raul T. Acosta
John J. Androski
Richard J. Bonacci
William V. Bruton
Martin L. Caine, Jr.
Alphonse L. Cantelmo
Sylvester A. Capalbo
Ralph D. J. Cavalli
Joseph V. F. Clay, Jr.
James F. Clinton, Jr.
Lawrence P. Conway
Anthony R. Fittante
Frank J. Fragala
1938
Ermin D. J. Pompizzi
John J. Sassaman
1939
Robert J. Gallagher
Peter Gatti
Chester J. Ginieczki
Richard B. Gleason
Martin F. Hayes
Arthur J. Hughes
William F. G. Kleuber
Martin J. Koebert
Armand S. Lincourt
Risley J. Madrechesia
Joseph P. Mallo
Llewellyn F. J. McGovern
Martin J. Nichols
Alfons J. Sierocki
Peter L. Steffa
Benjamin A. Wiech
Wallace J. Pianka
Nicholas P. Popov
George E. Potter, Jr.
John P. Primiano
John D. Rocco
Francis P. Sayers
Vincent Schettini
William J. Sigmund
Sygmund J. J. Telerski
William A. Tosick
Donald J. Volpe
John A. Walsh
Edward C. Whalen
Casmir W. Yakulis, Jr.
First Row — Mosch, Sell, Marquis, von Hottenstein
Second Row — Mellies, Hubbard, Keck, Brittingham, Overs
PTOLEMY SOCIETY
Founded 1910
Chapter Founded 1921
OFFICERS
President Charles P. Sell
Vice-President Robert A. Marquis
Secretary David F. von Hottenstein
Treasurer Herman C. Mosch
1936
Robert A. Marquis Charles P. Sell
1937
Wade F. Basinger Herman C. Mosch Paul F. Overs
Carl O. Keck David F. von Hottenstein
1938
John T. Brittingham John R. Hubbard Eugene G. Mellies
1939
Earl R. Ikeler
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LAMBDA PHI MU
First Row — Muzi, Agnone, Pecora, Massey, DiGiacomo, Colavita, Magolda
Second flow — Mannino, Fago, Ciccone, Trombino, Delagi, Sindaco
Third flow —Casella, Fiegoli, Cicchino. Rocco, Tamarelli
LAMBDA PHI MU
NU CHAPTER
Grand Master Daniel M. Massey
Master Carmine L. Pecora
Recording Secretary James J. Colaveta
Corresponding Secretary Peter M. Agnone
Treasurer Alfred M. DiGiacomo
FACULTY MEMBERS
Theodore W. Battafarano, M.D. Michele Viglione, M.D.
1936
Alfred M. DiGiacomo Joseph C. Elia Anthony F. Magolda
Michael A. Durante Daniel M. Massey
1937
Frank E. Cicchino Americo J. Muzi Carmine L. Pecora
James J. Colavita Mario S. Sindaco
1938
Peter M. Agnone Edward F. Delagi R. Gilbert Mannino
A. Victor Casella Paul G. Fago J. Adam Tamarelli
Edwin L. Ciccone lames Trombino
1939
Nicholas F. Fiegoli John D. Rocco
BLUE AND GOLD BALL
First Row Neber, Evans,
Barrett, Bowen, Bierwirth,
Calabrese, Mainella
Second Row -Hudson, Ben-
son, Hoffa, Sell, Serri, Reiss,
Hazzard, Cope
GLEE CLUB
First Row -Dow, Tate, Ca-
labrese, Albright, Sell.Clag-
ett, Kavanaugh, Bruton
Second Row — Sample, Har-
kins, Eisenberg, Overs,
Sherman, Krausz, Bresler
Third Row — Timney.Mosch,
Doering, Carp, Leyrer
ORCHESTRA
First Row Giannini, Crois-
sant, Serri, Lieut. Frankel,
Podell, Durante, Bernardin
Second Row — Carabello,
Cappola, Giordano, Bishow,
Caldwell, Bashline, Walsh,
Mainella
Third Row —Flora, DiSte-
fano, Gambescia, Bowman,
Houck, Bitman, Overs, Carp
•» . . * ■; v
THE NIGHT OF MAY SECOND
The peak of the social activities was reached on the night of May second,
when the annual Blue and Gold Ball, under the sponsorship of the Institute, was
held at the Bellevue-Stratford. It was truly an extravaganza and the committee,
capably headed by Robert Bowen, deserves no little credit for the success of the
affair. The active interest of Dr. H. M. Eberhard and Dr. William Lee was much
appreciated. Without it there would have been no Ted Fio Rito.
As has been customary for the past years, both the Glee Club and the
Orchestra performed on this gala occasion. The former organization, under the
leadership of Charles Sell and managed by Henry Clagett, made great strides
this year, closing a busy season with a fine performance at this time. The amount
of work put into something like this is little realized and so we are taking this
opportunity to thank the members of the Glee Club for their efforts.
Similarly for the orchestra, coached by Lieut. Frankel, directed by Morris
Podell and managed by William Serri.
All conspired to give us a grand evening and leave us with a very pleasant
memory of our days at Hahnemann.
ORCHESTRA
COACH Lieut. Joseph L. Frankel
DIRECTOR Morris J. Podell, '36
MANAGER William S. Serri, '36
Violins Banjo Saxophones
R. Croissant, '37 n. h. Durante, '36 H. R. Giordano, '37
P. J. MacLaren, '37 G. C. DiStefano, '38
J. Bernardin, '37 Flutes ^
txt -T, .~„ Trumpet
W. Tsorvas, 37 p. j. C. Gambescia, '37 H. W. Bashline, '38
C. A. Carabello, '38 R A Caldwell '38
Concertmeister Percussion
M. T. Cappola, '38 piano J- J- Mooradian, '39
J. Bitman, '38 R BishoW/ -38 Librarians
J. A. Walsh, '39 Frank s Mainella, '36
Cello Clarinets Albert Carp, '37
F. F. Giannini, '37 H. L. Bowman, '38 Assistant Librarians
Bass Violin A. F. Flora, '39 Harry Friedrich, '36
P. Overs, '37 H. E. Houck, '38 S. Monaco, '36
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STUDENT COUNCIL
First Row — DiGiacomo, Robertson, Moore
Second Row — Reiss, Finley, Hughes, Boger, Clay
THE INSTITUTE AND STUDENT COUNCIL
The Institute, composed of Senior students elected at large from the school,
works with the Student Council, a group of representatives from each of the four
classes, to form a liaison between the faculty and the student body.
The first task is usually that of welcoming the freshmen and giving them
a smoker as a means of getting acquainted with one another. The final task is
generally that of helping the seniors to say good-bye by sponsoring the Blue
and Gold Ball.
As an innovation this year a dinner was given the faculty, a gesture of
appreciation on the part of the Institute for the student body — an excellent
precedent and one which we hope will become a traditional affair.
THE CAMPUS
ADVERTISEMENTS
BEST WISHES
From the Manufacturers of
BENZEDRINE INHALER
BENZEDRINE SOLUTION
PENTNUCLEOTIDE
Smith, Kline & French Laboratories
105-115 N. 5th STREET
PHILADELPHIA, PA.
Established 1841
BOERICKE & TAFEL
HOMEOPATHIC PHARMACISTS
AND PUBLISHERS
Laboratories
AT
Philadelphia
Branches at
New York, Chicago, Pittsburgh, Cincinnati
BUSINESS ESTABLISHED IN 183 5
JOHN A. BORNEMAN
HOMEOPATHIC PHARMACIST
Thirty-six years' practical experience in manufacturing Homeo-
pathic Remedies.
Up to date in all matters pharmaceutical. The necessity for ultra
purity in strictly Homeopathic remedies is recognized and con-
stantly practised.
Manufacturing a full line of Tinctures, Tablet Triturates, Com-
pressed Tables, Ointments, and Specialties that produce de-
pendable results.
STUDENT OUTFIT ORDERS A SPECIALTY
Laboratories: Norwood, Delaware County, Pa.
Philadelphia Address : 248 N. 15th Street, Phila.
BELL & HOWELL
FILMO
70-D 16 mm.
MOVI E
CAMERA
The Physician's
Choice for
Professional
and Personal
Movie Making
Oince the beginnings of 16 mm. medical and surgical
motion pictures, the physician's and surgeon's choice
has been the precision-made Filmo 16 mm. eguipment
of Bell & Howell — always ready to produce the finest
possible pictures — easy to use — the product of the
makers, since 1907, of the most widely used studio
cinemachinery.
Filmo is also preferred for personal movie making — a
healthful diversion from the strain of professional duties.
The FILMO 8 mm. Movie Camera for Economy
Filmo 8's are truly pocket-size movie cameras that use
new low-cost 8 mm. film, producing large, crisp, bril-
liant motion pictures at less than the cost of snapshots.
Write for free booklet giving full description of Filmo
eguipmer.:.
WILLIAMS, BROWN & EARLE, Inc.
1885-1936
The Home of Motion Picture Eguipment
918 Chestnut Street Philadelphia, Pa.
Pennypacker 7320 Main 7261
THE
Adams-Lessack Co.
STATIONERS and PRINTERS
College Supplies Our Specialty
"No School Item too Hard to Get at Anytime"
145 N. 15TH STREET
Locust 1133
PHILADELPHIA, PA.
Race 1335
College Book Store
Medical Books
Stationery — Instruments
Mail Orders Promptly Filled
BASEMENT OF COLLEGE
Thank You . . . Class of '36
MICROSCOPES
For Selecting
'WILLIAMS' STANDARD"
LABORATORY APPARATUS
Pre-Shrunken
CHEMICALS
INTERNE SUITS
and
INSTRUMENTS
You will be delighted with their superior work-
manship and excellent wearing gualities.
MEDICAL BOOKS
Complete line of Coats, Trousers, Shirts, Operat-
ing Suits, and Dissecting Gowns . . . carried in
stock, also made to measure.
•
SEND FOR CATALOGUE D, SAMPLES AND PRICES
C. D. WILLIAMS & COMPANY
EDWARD P. DOLBEY & CO.
Designers and Manufacturers
246 South Eleventh Street
3621 Woodland Avenue
Philadelphia, Pa.
PHILADELPHIA
FRANK L. LAGAN GEO. H. McCONNELL
Doctors Are Salesmen, Too
Since, more than any other man, the Doctor is judged
on appearances, a modernly equipped, attractively ar-
ranged office is an income-producing asset.
X^2^*>x
The experience gained from outfitting and arranging
hundreds of physicians' offices, within the past few years,
is yours for the asking.
Write for our list of suggestions and tha names of Hahne-
mann Medical College men whose offices we have equipped.
| A.W.BRAEUNINGER |
N.W COR. I6tm a WALNUT STS.
PHILADELPHIA
•
•
Philadelphia Surgical
Instrument Company
1709 SANSOM STREET
RITtenhouse 3613
Doctors . . . Congratulations!
The Philadelphia
Hospital Supply Co.
328 South 17th Street
Philadelphia, Pa.
Specializes in
PHYSICIANS' OFFICE EQUIPMENT
MEDICAL AND SURGICAL SUPPLIES
Pay us a visit —
you will be agreeably surprised
PHONE: PENNYP ACKER 3974
Boericke & Runyon
HOMEOPATHIC
PHARMACISTS
116 South Eleventh Street
Philadelphia, Penna.
FRESH PLANT TINCTURES
TRITURATE TABLETS
COMBINATION TABLETS
SPECIALTIES, MEDICINE CASES
We solicit initial orders of Physicians
entering into the practice of medicine.
Catalogue Mailed on Request
Publishers of
BOERICKE'S MATERIA MEDICA
Ninth Edition
HENRY TROEMNER
MANUFACTURER OF
BALANCES, SCALES AND WEIGHTS
911 Arch Street
Philadelphia
T. R. Thomson
Stationery
and
Student Supplies
252 NORTH 16TH STREET
PHILADELPHIA, PA.
Hans W. Christoph, Inc.
ARTIFICIAL LIMBS
AND
ORTHOPEDIC APPLIANCES
SURGICAL APPLIANCES
1927-33 Delancey Street
Philadelphia, Pa.
Clayville's
BARBER SHOP
223 North 15th Street
ALL HAIR CUTS 25c
•
Special Attention Paid to
Ladies' and Children's Hair Cutting
We Make and Sell Surgical Instruments at Retail
Instruments for general surgery, ear, nose, and throat, bronchoscopy,
neurosurgery, diagnosis, and all hospital and physicians' supplies.
Pilling-made Instruments Cost No
More Than Good Instruments Should
GEORGE P. PILLING & SON CO.
ARCH AND 23rd STREETS, PHILADELPHIA, PA.
Where the PILLING surgical instrument business started 122 years ago near
Second and Dock Streets. The firm has been in continuous operation since then.
HAHNEMANN
LUNCHEONETTE
(FORMERLY GENE'S)
246 N. 15th STREET
"LOUIS" PROPRIETOR
Williams7 Restaurant
326 North Broad Street
•
SERVING
CLUB BREAKFASTS
DELICIOUS LUNCHEONS
SPECIAL FULL-COURSE DINNERS
RITtenhouse 6832 RACE 2864
Colonial Drug Co.
SURGICAL APPLIANCES
TRUSSES ARCH SUPPORTS
ELASTIC HOSIERY ABDOMINAL BELTS
GRADUATE FITTER
A. P. KARSH, PH.G.
201 N. 15th St., Philadelphia
Graduate Lady Attendant
AMERICUS HOTEL
ALLENTOWN, PA.
326 Rooms With Bath From $2.50
FIRE-PROOF PERFECT VENTILATION
CLUB BREAKFAST— 35c to 75c
BUSINESS MEN'S LUNCH— 50c, 75c, $1.00
EVENING DINNER— 75c, $1.00, $1.25, $1.50
Cafeteria Service in Coffee Shop at Popular Prices
Banquet Ball Room - 800 Capacity
National Academic
Cap and Gown Company
821-23 Arch Street
Philadelphia, Pa.
All Caps and Gowns Used at This
School Supplied By Us
NITROUS OXID OXYGEN
The Ohio Chemical
& Manufacturing Co.
PHILADELPHIA PURE OXYGEN COMPANY BRANCH
3623-25 Brandywine Street
Philadelphia, Pa.
THE COLLEGE STORE
EVERY MEDICAL BOOK PUBLISHED
Is Available Here
is an interesting thing. And perhaps we get the
most enjoyment out of our work when it gives
us a front seat at the parade of life as it passes.
When a man sits down in my studio he un-
consciously spreads hefore my eyes a page of
life. The world may know him as tremendously
practical, a leader in a very exacting and trying
phase of modern business.
But if the dreamer lies underneath, if the
humanitarian is in the background — counter bal-
ance for today's brass tacks, it is there in his face
for the seeing to see.
Portraiture must reveal the man whom per-
haps only his best friends truly know. A real
portrait is a very worth while thing.
RICHARD T. DOONER
17 2 4 Chestnut Street
PHILADELPHIA
^sliis C/J oolc
IS A CREDIT TO THE STAFF
OUR SPE
E R V I CE
Individual, Perso
Originality in D
Organi
(Quality Jbeyond <ji
Past records of successful performance
Largest and up-to-the-minute produc-
tion faciliti*
Many years*
PHILADELPHIA-WEEKS
ENGRAVING COMPANY
(Daucaitonal 'department
29 NORTH SIXTH STREET
PHILADELPHIA, PA.
For Reference
Not to be taken from this room
W ■
L/
LIBRARY
HAHNEMANN MEDICAL CflLLEGE
PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA
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